Hassocks High Street

Hassocks Food and Wines under new management - Hassocks

By Deirdre Huston

Many of you will know Suness from Keymer Stores. He achieved a degree in mathematics from London Metropolitan University. After graduating, as well as selling new cars, he traded in financial markets on FourX -an online platform. He then decided he wanted to have his own business, and says: “Being a businessman and investor, I bought Keymer Stores.”

The last few years have been full of change. This is true in terms of the pandemic, the economy, and also in Suness’ personal life. In August, 2021, Suness was acting as groomsman at the wedding of a friend. The bride’s best mate was Faizah Ali, a pharmacist from Glasgow. This was the first time Suness and Faizah met, and their relationship has since gone from strength to strength.

Around the time he met Faizah, Suness was making an important decision about which of two avenues to follow: he was considering whether to expand his retail business by buying more shops, or whether to invest in property. Suness says: “Once you meet someone, you have a shared life together, and this influences your decisions.”
Suness has always worked long hours, but when he settles down and has a family, he would welcome having the flexibility to spend some time with his family. Faizah helped Suness decide to expand the retail business. Suness says: “I like the idea of creating new owners who start with little retail experience but want to build a future of their own.” He adds: “I may be able to help with financial and legal support, too.”

Suness says: “I’m creating a family business with the help of my brother, Neel, who is now in charge of stock operations.” Another well-known personality from Keymer Stores is Frank Guoonghe, who has now been promoted to Regional Manager.
In November, Suness took over Hassocks Food and Wines. The previous owner, Jasvir, heard that Suness was buying stores and messaged that he might be interested as he wanted to start a different type of business. Suness was delighted to take on another shop in the village, as he has built up a strong connection with the local community. In December, Suness will also complete on the purchase of a shop in Ham Road, Shoreham called Lighters Newsagents.

Suness says: “With the help of my team, we are hoping to expand,” and adds: “We are grateful for the support we’ve received from ASM Accountants.” Suness aims to complete on further shops where there is a strong connection with the community. He explains: “I envisage a family network of shops.” He is actively looking for other shops across South East England, but they have to be the right locations. He says: “We’ve built up a good connection with the convenience store community in this region, and our team is actively looking for the next shop.”

Having more than one shop enables me to bulk buy to ensure our prices are competitive.” He adds: “This is important, especially right now, so we’re always trying to get items at a better price to keep our customers happy.”
It’s important to Suness that management retains a direct connection with the customer and therefore he’s commissioned a bespoke software system which will work via an iPad in each shop. “We will have a lot of realtime updates on stock,” explains Suness, “and this will also facilitate feedback to help bridge the gap between customer and management.”

Suness already manages a lot of orders for regular customers and says: “Pretty much anything we stock in the shop, such as wine or beer, we can get hold of for loyal customers, if they are buying a box or crate.” Since the pandemic, Suness has done deliveries, as suits the particular needs of his customers.

The Keymer shop will keep the full parcel and label printing service but the Hassocks Food and Wine branch will be a delivery and collection point for Collect Plus and Yodel.

Suness will still be around and about in the village as he now has an office at the back of the Hassocks Food and Wines store, so do stop and say hello.

Hassocks welcomes Sawai Thai Massage to the High Street

Say hello to Sawai Thai Massage

Sawai Khampha came to visit a friend in Hassocks and noticed there was no Thai massage shop here. She’s lived in Rottingdean for about four years, and says, “I was driving to London to work, and my husband complained he never saw me!” She spotted an empty shop she thought might be suitable. She says: “I talked it over with my husband and we decided it was a good idea.” She says: “The people in Hassocks are very friendly. I’ve chosen the right place!” At the end of November, another masseur will join Sawai’s team which means they can do a couple’s massage if people want treatments at the same time.

Sawai was born in Thailand. She completed a training programme in Thai Massage with the Union of Thai Traditional Medicine Society and The Association of Traditional Thai Reflexological Massage. Her grandfather was a masseur, and she wonders if this influenced her to take up the profession. When she first came to England, around 2003, she continued training, and achieved a Level 3 Certificate Diploma in Massage Therapy and a Diploma in Pregnancy Massage from the Fami Hair and Beauty Institute. “I love this job,” says Sawai, and adds: “In the beginning, I trained to help my husband who had back ache: he was a paramedic who did lots of lifting, and then, one day, he couldn’t get up.” She helped him recover and he now works in A&E in University Hospitals Sussex. Once he was better, Sawai wanted to use her skills to help other people. “People come in with different problems, such as back pain, sciatica or migraines.” Sawai looks forward to looking after everyone in Hassocks.

Buy local this Christmas on Hassocks High Street and more

A shopping ‘list’ by Kelly Leppard. Kelly, owner of Bella June Flowers and a passionate shopper, approached Hassocks Life because she wanted to do everything she could to encourage local residents to start their seasonal stocking up right here in the village.
Whilst we weren’t able to include every shop by name, it’s our hope that highlighting some of the excellent calibre on offer here makes the case for exploring more shops at your leisure.

Start your Christmas shopping in Hassocks this year….


Lighting and homewares from My Vintage

Bikes & cycling accessories from Proper

Wine & chocolates from Hassocks Wines - 13 Keymer Rd, Hassocks BN6 8AD

Gift hampers from Adastra Deli

Stockings, fillers & toys from QD Stationery

Candles, incense & gifting from Indigo

Christmas trees from South Downs Nurseries

Houseware, tools & sundries from Hassocks Hardware

Cushions, throws & Christmas table-scaping from Marram

Wreaths and garlands from Bella June Flowers

Vouchers and make hair care from Thatchers

Beauty gifts and vouchers from Profiles

Plus loads of others! Start your Christmas shopping in Hassocks this year.

The return of the Repair Café in Hassocks

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After almost a year of operating remotely, the Repair Café Hassocks will be opening face-to-face at last, at the United Reformed Church on Keymer Road.

The opening will be a fitting finale for HKD Transition’s Great Big Green Week, part of a national week of events celebrating action on climate change. The first date is Saturday 25 September from 10am - 12.30pm and, from then, the shop will be open on the fourth Saturday, the same day as Hassocks Market, except in December and August.

You’ll be able to bring your items for repair, talk to the volunteer repairers and have a cup of tea or coffee while they look at what’s needed. The idea of repair cafés was born in Amsterdam in 2007 and swiftly spread across the world. The premise is simple enough: instead of throwing away your rusty kettle, faulty vacuum cleaner or knackered lamp, you take it to a meeting place, where knowledgeable volunteers help you mend the item, understand what’s gone wrong, and even show you how to mend it.

Our amazing repair volunteers have responded to almost 200 repair requests in the last 9 months. Some repairs are simple enough to do at the café, others will be taken home by repairers, to be collected when ready. We can’t repair everything, but we can point you towards professional repairers who may be able to help if we can’t. From 1st September you will be able to book a slot for the opening day on our website or Facebook page. Even if you don’t have something to be repaired, or have already had a repair done remotely, do come along and say hello. www.facebook.com/repaircafehassocks

Hassocks' own Ross and Rachael story at Proper

By Deirdre Huston

Many of you may already know Rachael at Proper. She is that sort of person, very community-minded, and determined to support others and make a success of things, however difficult the circumstances. Born in Crawley Hospital, Rachael grew up in Horsham. She has since managed a variety of cafes, pubs and music venues across Sussex, spending time in places such as Uckfield, Brighton and Chichester, before settling in Hassocks.

The Bridge House was an early venture for Rachael. Located at Copsale, on The Downs Link cycle trail, the pub hummed with activity in summer, but its rural position meant it attracted little custom in colder weather. As a lover of the music scene, Rachael organised gigs, and the pub took off as a music venue.

“We went for it!” remembers Rachael “There was music seven nights a week and we held mini-festivals in the garden. It was really good fun.” They attracted some renowned artists like Frank Turner and, as the venue developed a reputation for being a friendly home-from home, some bands came from a long way away. “I was like a mother figure to these touring bands. I’d come down in the morning and there would be people sleeping everywhere.”

Around this time, Rachael first met her business partner. He had noticed The Bridge House listed as a music venue on a poster, and, hoping to arrange a gig for a band he was managing, he popped into the pub. He and Rachael hit it off and have been friends ever since. “He had a very successful recording studio in Uckfield,” explains Rachael, “and we worked in a similar way,”

Wanting new challenges, Rachael moved on from The Bridge House. “At one point, I had two pubs, a coffee shop and a music venue,” she recalls, “it was mad.” After a while, she fancied trying something different. “I got out of the pub and coffee shop business,” she explains, “and did the nine-to-five thing for six years. I loved being in an office, but I was hankering after having my own place again, because that’s my real buzz, music and coffee shops.”

One day, Ross called, and asked how she felt about opening a cycle café. “Sometimes you have to trust your gut and straight away, I knew it was the right thing to do,” recalls Rachael. The business partners undertook a year of careful planning. They were looking for three factors when choosing location: it had to be somewhere a lot of cyclists rode past, near a school and a train station. A shop in Hassocks became available.

To find out what happened next, how Rachel grew within the community and what connection could Ross have to a cycling club, pick up a May issue of Hassocks life today.

Hassocks High Street offers local customers enticing vouchers

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After months of closure, shopkeepers and shoppers alike are delighted to have seen doors open again last month. Most retail businesses have been hit very hard by the pandemic with many having to shut for a second time after Christmas last year. In this special focus on the high street, we are delighted to give readers of Hassocks Life the opportunity for that sweet-tasting special offer – with 12 cut-out-and-use vouchers for businesses right here in the village. Pick up a May issue to get yours!

We also talk to those business owners as they get used to exercising that friendly smile again – although, admittedly, from behind a mask!
On Monday 12th April, a queue formed outside Humanity at Heart as eager shoppers waited to be allowed back in after lockdown. Manager Ann Heroys was delighted to see so much interest.

After three plus months, Dawn, at Indigo, is very much looking forward to welcoming you back through its doors. “We have missed you all,” says Dawn, “but while we have been closed, we have been busy sourcing lots of lovely new products that will be ready for you to come and see. We look forward to seeing you, if we haven’t already.”

There’s change up the road too, as The Purple Carrot now boasts a secluded but spacious terrace at the back with an open-sided gazebo. Plastic screens separate tables big enough for social distancing and a heater helps keep chilly evenings at bay. The café is now open Monday to Wednesday evenings as well as mornings and lunchtimes on Saturdays and Sundays. Chris and the team look forward to welcoming you back.

At Hassocks Eyecare Centre, optometrist Vicki Macken is delighted to see things easing and says: “We are so happy we are to see the smiley faces of our fellow traders back where they belong in their proper habitat, whichever shop or outlet that might be.”

Russell Thatcher comments: “It’s great to see Hassocks come alive again and be back serving our community. The support from both local businesses and customers has been absolutely amazing and we are extremely grateful. It’s been an awful year; but this community has been unwavering in its commitment to support each other, and because of that I know Hassocks will continue to thrive.”

Grab a copy of May’s Hassocks Life to find all the varied offers available.

Hassocks' community spirit at its best with surprise giveaway

During January, Natalie West, of The Little Igloo Company, had the brilliant idea of organising a giveaway amongst some Hassocks business owners, including Indigo and CakesByLara. Altogether, six businesses put together a generous package of gifts to support deserving families through this difficult winter. Natalie West says: “I am a new business and wanted to support other local businesses. I thought if we all got together, we could help each other out, and then I came up with the idea to do a local family giveaway.”

“When Natalie asked if I would like to be involved it was an immediate yes from Harry and Belle!” adds Vanessa Burnham. “It felt great to be involved with a giveaway that would help to bring some light and respite in dark and challenging times.”

Ruth Corke of the beauty salon, Profiles, comments: “I thought the competition was a lovely idea, especially at the moment, with so many families having a really tough time being separated from their extended family, job losses, illnesses, and the nation home-schooling and coping with all the challenges that brings with it!”

Briony Torney agrees: “This latest lockdown has been tough for absolutely everyone and I really sympathise with the children stuck inside, unable to see friends or go to school AND the parents doing the impossible – home-schooling and attempting to work at the same time. And, of course, it’s been even tougher for some people for a variety of reasons.
“So the idea of a beautiful igloo, packed full of goodies, magically appearing in your garden seemed like fun and an exciting treat at any age!” As owner of Briony Mae Flowers, she’s aware of the benefits of blooms, and continues: “Flowers are known to help with boosting moods so offering a bunch to the winner and runners up seemed an easy way to lift spirits a tad. Since the first lockdown I’ve been offering Friday Flowers locally every week, small bunches to perk up your home, or gift to a friend.” There’s much we share in common through these difficult times. “It’s the little things that keep us going,” points out Briony, and she admits that for her, it’s a real boost to have the occasional coffee from Proper.

Local residents were asked to nominate possible recipients for the giveaway and the businesses were very moved by the response. “Hassocks is such a caring community of people of all ages,” comments Ruth, “and it was really lovely to read what people wrote about each other and why they wanted to nominate.”

“We had some amazing nominations that were also heart-breaking,” recalls Natalie. “We decided to separate some gifts so we could give a smile to a few more families.” An outdoor igloo was set up in the winner’s garden and other gifts placed inside. Profiles donated a beauty box hamper worth over £150. “The lady that won sent me a message and was delighted with all her goodies,” explains Ruth. “The salon is currently offering a selection of ‘click and collect’ hampers every few weeks with each one having a limited quantity: themes vary from ‘New Mum’ to ‘Thank you’ to seasonal specials. They’re ideal as gifts or if you wish to treat yourself.”

Vanessa, who donated earrings, comments: “The lovely part of making and sourcing jewellery is that it has the power to give a little feel-good to the recipient. Since the arrival of Covid in our lives, we have all come to understand the importance of our immediate community. We’ve felt our worlds shrink significantly and it’s felt more important than ever to consider those close by.” Other gifts included cupcakes from CakesbyLara and a voucher for Indigo. “It was great to bring some joy when everything has felt pretty bleak,” adds Vanessa.

“I would love to do this again, maybe in the summer,” says Natalie.

Welcome back to the High Street

Hassocks High Street

Hassocks High Street

By Deirdre Huston Hassocks high street has been through some tough times, and seen many changes, but the Coronavirus Crisis this year has been one of the strangest periods that many of us can remember. Some shops were able to keep trading and served the local community diligently by working long hours, putting themselves at risk and through providing deliveries where possible. Hassocks Hardware was very busy, and it was common for a queue to stretch from its door as residents purchased essential items. The pet shop enabled locals to maintain high standards of animal care, while local corner shops and supermarkets provided options for shoppers who couldn’t obtain online slots. Twine, the butchers, was open mornings and also undertook deliveries across local areas on various days. Another example was Hassocks Eyecare Centre, which was contracted by the NHS to remain open offering urgent and essential eyecare throughout lockdown. “We furloughed most of the team,” explained Vicki Macken, “since it was clearly not ‘business as usual’, but Paul and I as business owners had to become receptionist, dispensing optician, technician and delivery driver as well as being optometrists! The practice looks transformed with plastic screens everywhere and we are now accustomed to rustling as we walk with the plastic aprons on.” Circumstances and government regulations to prevent the spread of Covid-19 required many of our local businesses to close, and, this summer, it’s a relief to see many of these businesses opening their doors again.
To read more about what Vicki had to say and to find out about other shops in the high street, pick up an August copy of Hassocks Life today.