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Map

The map of the Hundred Acre Wood in the original Pooh stories

The Hundred Acre Wood is the name of the forest in which most, if not all of the Winnie-the-Pooh stories take place. It‘s location is still uncertain, as is its size, though one could assume that the Wood is so-named because it is about 100 acres in size, which would be equivalent to 0.4 square kilometers or 0.16 square miles.

The landscape of the Wood seems to vary based on the particular Pooh production - for example, the layout of the Wood in Kingdom Hearts II is radically different from that of its appearance in the original Kingdom Hearts.

Locations[]

In the original Winnie-the-Pooh books by A. A. Milne, the name "Hundred Acre Wood" is used only to refer to the parts of the forest surrounding Owl's house, with the other characters residing outside of it. Nowadays, however, and especially in the Disney adaptations of the franchise, the name is usually used to refer to the whole forest, as Milne's books provided no better alternative for it. In the Disney franchise, it was located within a Winnie the Pooh book, which Christopher Robin was magically transported to the place through the pages of the book. Thus, using the broader definition, the Hundred Acre Wood includes such locations as Owl's House, Pooh's house, Piglet's House, the Pooh Corner (renamed Pooh & Piglet Corner in Piglet's Big Movie), the Poohsticks Bridge, Rabbit's House and Tigger's House. What follows is a list of locations mentioned in the book and shown in the Wood's map:

  • Pooh Bear's House
  • Kanga's House (Roo and Tigger also live here)
  • The Sandy Pit Where Roo Plays
  • The Nice Place for Piknicks
  • The Bee Tree (so-called because a wild beehive is in it, and featuring in Chapter 1 of Winnie-the-Pooh)
  • The Way to the North Pole (established in the story "In Which Christopher Robin Leads an Expotition to the North Pole")
  • The Area of Big Stones and Rocks
  • Rabbit's House
  • The Area Where Rabbit's Friends-and-Raletions Live
  • Christopher Robin's House
  • The Six Pine Trees
  • The Area of the Pooh Trap for Heffalumps (which was made in "Piglet Meets a Heffalump" and mentioned in "In Which a Search is Organdized and Piglet Nearly Meets the Heffalump Again", in episode Honey for a Bunny converted to space for used stuff. )
  • Piglet's House (renamed the Wolery towards the end of The House at Pooh Corner)
  • The Area Where the Woozle Wasn't (named from "In Which Pooh and Piglet Go Hunting and Nearly Catch a Woozle")
  • The Floody Place
  • Owl's House (also known as the Chestnuts)
  • Eeyore's Gloomy Place

Most of these places' names are references to events described in the books Winnie-the-Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner. Additional places mentioned in the books but not shown in the map include:

  • Pooh Corner (and the house there)
  • The Poohsticks Bridge (in the books, it has no official name, but that's its accepted moniker since it's where the game Poohsticks was invented.)
  • The Stepping Stones
  • The Gravel Pit (where Pooh and Piglet fall into in "In Which a Search is Organdized and Piglet Nearly Meets the Heffalump Again")
  • Pooh's Thoughtful Spot (situated between his and Piglet's houses, and so-called because he goes there to think.)
  • Galleon's Lap (only seen in the last chapter of The House at Pooh Corner)

Locations featured only in Disney stories include Gopher's Tunnels, the Scary Woods and the Heffalump Hollow.

100AkerWoodFan1

Fan-made Hundred Acre Wood map

Locality[]

As stated above, the exact locality of the Hundred Acre Wood is uncertain. It is generally believed to be in the United Kingdom, as it is based on a real British forest (see below). However, this possibility is problematic due to the fact that there are no bears living in the British Isles in real life (a fact that may also apply to Tigger, although within the Winnie-the-Pooh universe he is actually a member of the fictional "Tigger" species, not a tiger, as generally believed). In Disney adaptations of the stories, it is likely that the Wood is in North America, which could explain away not only Pooh but also Gopher, a character not present in the original books, and whose species is indigenous to North America.

However, it is the presence of Kanga and Roo that becomes problematic with this assumption, as there is a population of wild kangaroos living on the UK (an invasive species), but not in the USA. This could be explained away by the fact that, both in the books and cartoons, it is believed that Kanga and Roo have moved from Australia. However, this means that Gopher has probably moved from America. In the episode "The Piglet Who Would Be King", from The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Tigger and Rabbit travel to a place called the Land of Milk and Honey, located in a jungle, under a volcano. While it is unclear how far they traveled to get there, the presence of a jungle even moderately near the Hundred Acre Wood pretty much puts the last nail in the coffin of the idea that the Wood is in England as far as Disney adaptations go, even though there is no jungle in the USA. Although they could’ve left the USA and gone to Mexico or Central America.

Behind the scenes[]

The Hundred Acre Wood is based on an actual place called the Five Hundred Acre Wood, situated in the Ashdown Forest, in East Sussex, England, where A. A. Milne was living when he wrote the books. Today, areas of this wood have been named after locations seen or mentioned in Milne's Pooh books, as a tribute to the author, including a bridge identified as the Poohsticks Bridge, and an area designed as the Enchanted Place. There is also a memorial plaque dedicated to both Milne and Ernest H. Shepard, who illustrated the classic books.

Inhabitants[]

The Hundred Acre World is inhabited by the following animals (those marked with an asterisk have been featured in Disney adaptations only):

UnderConstruction This article is still under construction
While there is enough content for it to not be considered a stub, it is still very incomplete. Any additions or talk page suggestions to improve it will be highly appreciated
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