Funny Sister Birthday Gifs From Pooh Bear

This is a consummate list of characters appearing in the Winnie-the-Pooh books and the Disney adaptations of the series.

Chief characters

Winnie-the-Pooh

Winnie the Pooh

Winnie-the-Pooh, or Pooh for short, is a soft-voiced, loveable and repose anthropomorphic bear who is the protagonist. Despite existence naive and slow-witted, he is a friendly, thoughtful, and sometimes insightful character who is ever willing to help his friends and try his best. A prime motivation is his love for honey (sometimes milk and chocolate), which quite often leads to trouble. He is Piglet'south best friend.

In the books, Pooh is a talented poet, and the stories are frequently punctuated by his poems and "hums". He is apprehensive well-nigh his slow-wittedness, but comfy with his creative gifts.

In the Disney adaptations, Pooh is just the titular protagonist of the franchise. He has a soft English language-absolute voice and he wears a carmine shirt. His catchphrases are "Oh, bother!" and "Recollect, think, think". He has been voiced by Sterling Holloway since 1966 until 1977, Hal Smith (1981-1983) and currently Jim Cummings.

Christopher Robin

Christopher Robin

Christopher Robin is the sole human grapheme in the story books, he has a cheerful and compassionate personality and is someone that Pooh and the others look up to. Despite being a child, he is much wiser and more mature than many of the other characters. Pooh considers both Christopher Robin and Piglet to be his all-time friends. Christopher shell on Anne in Now We Are Half dozen.

Christopher Robin matures considerably over the course of the books. Several chapters in The Firm at Pooh Corner are concerned with Christopher Robin first to go to schoolhouse and his increasing book-learning. In the final chapter, Christopher Robin leaves his stuffed animals behind and asks Pooh to sympathise and to ever recollect him.

The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh re-imagines him as an American boy living in the suburban firm 100 Acre Road whose lawn connects directly to the Hundred Acre Wood. His mother besides appears in the serial and Robin is manifestly their surname in that continuity. Some of these elements were reused for The Volume of Pooh, but the animals are once again characters in Christopher Robin's storybook. His hollow tree house does non appear from both series. He has a trivial sis named Darby, a 6-year-old girl who hosts My Friends Tigger & Pooh, but he only appeared in the testify twice, due to him going off to college. By the live-action film Christopher Robin, however, he took a turn for the worse. Due to the education he received in boarding school, the death of his begetter, his work as a World War II soldier, and his job, he came to believe that the more than he works, the better his family unit will be, even missing a weekend at his old house with his family so he could work, and planning to send his girl, Madeline, to a boarding schoolhouse and then she could receive the same didactics he had, mistakes which end upwards distancing him from his daughter and his wife, Evelyn. He became completely workaholic, choosing to work instead of having fun with his friends and family unit, to the point of refusing to go with his family to Sussex for the weekend and helping Pooh find their friends due to him having to piece of work.

In the Disney adaptations, he has been voiced past Bruce Reitherman (1966), Timothy Turner (1974), Jon Walmsley (1968), Sean Marshall (1977), Kim Christianson (1983), Tim Hoskins (1988-1995), Edan Gross (1991), Brady Bluhm (1997-1999), Tom Attenborough (2000), Tom Wheatly (2003), William Dark-green (2002), Frankie J. Galasso, Kath Soucie, Jeff Bennett (singing voices) Paul Tiesler (2001-2003), Struan Erlenborn (2007-2010) and Jack Boulter (2011–present).

Piglet

Piglet

Piglet is a timid hog and Pooh'due south all-time friend as well Christopher Robin. In the books he is a timorous small brute, who oft takes his lead from Pooh unless overcome by fright. But increasingly through the stories he shows himself to be very dauntless when faced with a crunch and given sufficient encouragement (usually by Pooh). His favorite food acorns.

In the Disney series he is kind, gentle and ordinarily quite shy, but with Pooh by his side, he often overcomes his fears. His catchphrase is "Oh, d-d-dear!". Piglet lives in a beech tree that he likes to keep neat and tidy, and can sing very well. He has been voiced by John Fiedler (1968-2005), Phil Baron (1983-1986), Steve Schatzberg (1996-2008), Jeff Bennett and Travis Oates (2005–current).

Tigger

Tigger

Tigger is an energetic springy tiger who introduced in 1928 storybook The House at Pooh Corner. He is Pooh's exuberant, happy, less-than-responsible and sometimes trouble-making friend. He loves to bounce, especially bouncing on others. He is full of energy, outgoing, and likes to take fun and is so overconfident that he thinks that any task is "what Tiggers exercise best". He becomes Roo'southward best friend. He already loved malt extract.

In the Disney films, Tigger commonly mispronounces words, like 'ridickerus' (ridiculous) or 'vill-i-an' (villain) and oftentimes causes chaos rather than proficient. However, Tigger is too shown to exist tough, fearless, optimistic and resourceful. His main catchphrase is "Hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo!" when he is happy. He starts to badger Rabbit in his garden. He has been voiced past Paul Winchell since 1968 until 1997, Volition Ryan (1983-1986) and currently Jim Cummings.

Eeyore

Eeyore

Eeyore is a depressed ass who is Pooh's ever-glum, sarcastic and pessimistic ass friend who has trouble keeping his tail attached to his rear. Eeyore has a business firm made of sticks, which falls apart (many times in the Disney films) and has to exist rebuilt.

In the Disney cartoons, Eeyore is tiresome-talking and more cautious than some of the other animals, and is oft reluctant to go along with their actions, just ordinarily does not carp trying to oppose anyone because he believes it to be futile to try. His catchphrase is "Thanks for noticing" as indicated to himself. He has been voiced by Ralph Wright (1966-1983), Ron Feinberg (1981), Ron Gans (1983-1986), Peter Cullen (1988-2010, 2017-present), Dylan Watson (singing voice), Gregg Berger and Bud Luckey (2011–2014) and Brad Garrett.

Rabbit

Rabbit

Rabbit is friendly, but irritable. He fancies himself the smartest bunny beast in the Hundred Acre Wood. He insists on doing things his way and is obsessed with rules, planning and social club. He ofttimes loses his temper to others and bosses them around, only deep down, he cares a lot most his friends. In the Walt Disney films, he takes pride in his garden and hates when anyone (mainly Tigger, but too Gopher) messes it up. Rabbit is one of the characters not based on a toy once owned by Christopher Robin Milne.

Voiced in the Disney films by Junius Matthews (1966-1977), Ray Erlenborn (1983), Volition Ryan (1983-1986), Ken Sansom (1988-2010) and Tom Kenny (2011-present).

Owl

Owl

Owl is a owl who presents himself as a mentor and teacher to the others. He was not based on a blimp toy, then in the illustrations, he looks more like a live animal. Owl and virtually of his friends believe that he is the most intelligent fauna in the woods, only he is really quite scatterbrained. He often rambles on into long-winded speeches and uses words that his friends do not sympathise. Though Owl likes to nowadays himself every bit very knowledgeable, similar near of the other characters he does non spell very well—he fifty-fifty spells his own proper noun "Wol". When Pooh comes to him for help in writing a altogether greeting for Eeyore, Owl tells Pooh that he is writing, "A very happy birthday with love from Pooh," just in fact writes "HIPY PAPY BTHUTHDTH THUTHDA BTHUTHDY." Pooh, who cannot read or write himself, goes on his way happy with Owl's piece of work and grateful for his help. When Rabbit (who is quite literate) comes to Owl to discuss a notice that Christopher Robin has left, Owl cannot read the notice. But rather than admit this, Owl anxiously bluffs his mode through the conversation until he finally tricks Rabbit into reading the notice out loud, at which indicate Owl resumes his wise demeanor as if he had known all along what it said.

In the books, Owl has a superior but kindly mode towards the others. He can exist cantankerous and easily annoyed, especially when his friends ignore or interrupt his long-winded speeches. He sometimes wears reading glasses and he uses his talons for hands, not his wings like in the Disney version. He lives in a tree known as The Chestnuts, described as an "old world residence of great charm". That business firm is diddled down by a storm in the eighth chapter of The Firm at Pooh Corner. Eeyore eventually discovers what he believes is the perfect new house for Owl, manifestly without noticing that information technology is actually Piglet's house. Nonetheless, Piglet offers the business firm to Owl. Owl calls his new home "The Wolery".

In the Disney adaptations, Owl is much more jovial and friendly. He speaks with a strong southern english accent. He enjoys telling stories about his relatives, including his cousin, Dexter, whenever something reminds him of one, merely many of his stories are pointless or absurd. His business firm blows downward and he moves into Piglet's house in Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day, but these events are disregarded from Winnie the Pooh and a 24-hour interval for Eeyore onward. In Return to Pooh Corner, Owl ever wears glasses and loves to cook. He does announced in My Friends Tigger and Pooh.

He has been voiced past Hal Smith (1966-1995), Andre Stojka (1997-2007) and Craig Ferguson (2011–present).

Kanga

Kanga

Kanga is a female kangaroo and the doting mother of Roo. She had crush on Pooh Bear. The two live in a house near the Sandy Pit in the northwestern office of the woods. Kanga is the simply female person character to appear in the books. She was based on a stuffed toy that belonged to Christopher Robin Milne.

When Kanga and Roo first come to the forest in chapter 7 of Winnie-the-Pooh, everyone thinks Kanga is a fierce animate being, but discover this to be untrue and go friends with her. In the books, when Tigger comes to the forest, she welcomes him into her home, attempts to find him food he likes and allows him to live with her and Roo. After this, Kanga treats him much the way she does her own son.

Kanga is kind-hearted, calm, patient and docile. She likes to keep things clean and organized, and offers motherly advice and nutrient to anyone who asks her. She is protective over Roo, almost obsessively, and treats him with kind words and gentle field of study. She also has a sense of sense of humour, as revealed in chapter seven of Winnie-the-Pooh when Rabbit connives to kidnap Roo, leaving Piglet in his place; Kanga pretends not to notice that Piglet is not Roo and proceeds to give him Roo'south usual bath, much to Piglet's dismay.

In the Disney adaptations, Kanga's personality is unchanged (though she is a piddling more sensible and does give Roo some level of independence), but she plays a slightly bottom function and does not appear as often as Roo does. Additionally, Tigger lives in his own business firm instead of with Kanga (Although he is seen ofttimes visiting her house). Kanga too has a love for carrots. She has been voiced by Barbara Luddy (1966-1977), Julie McWhirter (1983), Patricia Parris (1988-1990), Tress MacNeille (1994-1999, 2011-present) and Kath Soucie (2000-2010).

Roo

Roo

Roo is Kanga's cheerful, playful, cuddly and energetic joey, who moved to the Hundred Acre Forest with her. His best friend is Tigger, whom he looks up to like an older brother. Roo is the youngest of the master characters.

Voiced in the Disney films past Clint Howard (1966-1977), Dori Whitaker (1974), Dick Billingsley (1983), Kim Christianson (1983-1986), Nicholas Melody (1988-1990), Nikita Hopkins (1994-2005), Jimmy Bennett (2004-2005), Max Burkholder (2007-2010) and Wyatt Hall (2011–present).

Minor characters in the books

Heffalumps

Heffalumps

Heffalumps are elephant-similar creatures get-go mentioned in the fifth chapter of the commencement book, and afterwards in the third affiliate of the 2nd. In the books, Piglet twice has a run-in with a Heffalump that is simply a figment of his imagination. The Disney version establishes them as real creatures. Like Pooh imagined in the books, Heffalumps are addicted of honey and like to take it for themselves. There take been several real Heffalump characters in the Disney version. Some Heffalumps are villainous creatures and some are genuinely good. Lumpy the Heffalump is Roo'southward good friend, appearing in Pooh's Heffalump Picture and also, My Friends Tigger and Pooh. In The Book of Pooh there were Heffalumps named: Herman, Hector and Haji.

Woozles

Woozles

A woozle is a weasel-like animal imagined by the characters in the 3rd and ninth chapters of Winnie-the-Pooh. No Woozles really appear in A. A. Milne'southward original stories, but the book depicts them as living in cold, snowy places. They are get-go mentioned when Pooh and Piglet try to capture one, which they assume made the tracks in the snow going around a larch spinney. The more they follow them, the more sets of tracks they find, but Christopher Robin shows them that the tracks around the spinney are their own.

Woozles appear in the song "Heffalumps and Woozles" in Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Twenty-four hour period, which establishes their fondness for stealing love and their clan with Heffalumps. In The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, Woozles are real creatures. A Woozle named Stan and his sidekick Heff the Heffalump are recurring villains. They once recruited a giant Woozle named Wooster (also voiced by Peter Cullen) who turned confronting them when Pooh and his friends taught him the value of friendship. Woozles do not appear in the Disney adaptations almost as oft equally Heffalumps do and, unlike Heffalumps, always try to act every bit villains, with Wooster being the only i to change his mind on this.

Wizzle

A Wizzle is a creature mentioned only once, in Winnie-the-Pooh (volume). It is unknown what a wizzle looks like, or even if they actually exist, but they are apparently either smaller, or bigger, than woozles. In their only appearance, Pooh and Piglet are tracking some footprints that turn out to be their own, and when Piglet's footprints appear, Pooh suggests that they were caused past a wizzle, or possibly by a woozle while the other footprints (which were afterward revealed to be Pooh's) were acquired past wizzles.

Jagular

Jagulars

Jagulars are imagined jaguar-similar fierce creatures that are merely mentioned in the fourth affiliate of The House at Pooh Corner where Pooh and Piglet mistake Tigger for one. According to Pooh, they always yell "Aid" (or "Halloo" in Winnie the Pooh and Tigger As well), hang in trees and when you expect upwardly they drop on you. Jagulars have yet to actually appear in any Disney adaptations, so it is notwithstanding unknown whether they are real. Their virtually prominent role to date is in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh where they are mentioned more often and are the main antagonists in a couple of episodes.

The Backson

The Backson

The Backson is a fauna imagined by the characters after misunderstanding Christopher Robin's note, which meant he would exist "back shortly" from school. He is mentioned only not seen in The House at Pooh Corner equally "the Spotted or Herbaceous Backson". He is the main adversary in Winnie the Pooh where the animals think he has captured Christopher Robin. Owl describes him as a large, ugly, mean and scary royal and blueish creature who ruins or destroys many everyday items, such as books, socks and crayons. Pooh and his friends build a trap to try to capture him (a pit with a trail of books, socks, dishes, toys and other items leading to it), but Christopher Robin reveals that he was never captured, simply abroad at schoolhouse. At the end of the motion picture, the Backson turns out to exist real, but he is a kind and helpful creature who wants to render people'due south things to them. Still, the trap does capture him, as he picks upwardly all the items so falls into the pit. The Backson is voiced by Huell Howser.

Uncle Robert'due south portrait

Uncle Robert

Uncle Robert was Owl's uncle, whose portrait hangs on Owl's wall. He is mentioned in the eighth affiliate of The House at Pooh Corner, but never really appears. His portrait appears in Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore when Owl says Uncle Robert celebrated his 103rd birthday, despite claiming to be 97. Render to the Hundred Acre Wood reveals that Uncle Robert is dead, but Owl keeps his ashes in a vase and attempts to write his biography.

Lottie

Lottie

Lottie is an otter and the only new major character in Return to the Hundred Acre Wood. Lottie is a "feisty" character who is too proficient at cricket and insists on proper etiquette. She wears a pearl necklace and can play the rima oris organ, but is a footling snide and snobby in her remarks. She makes her home in a wooden trunk filled with h2o that she calls Fortitude Hall. Co-ordinate to Benedictus, "Lottie the Otter truly embodies Winnie-the-Pooh's values of friendship and adventure seen throughout Milne's piece of work, thus making the perfect companion for anybody's favorite bear."

Granddaddy Buck

Grandpa Buck

Grandad Buck is Rabbit's grandfather. He wears glasses and is described every bit "Very Ancient and the Head of the Rabbit Family". He does not entirely corroborate of Rabbit, just gives him communication anyhow. He knew Owl'south late Uncle Robert, who sent him letters.

Thesaurus

A Thesaurus is what Piglet imagines to be a big reptilian beast in a similar manner to how the characters imagined Heffalumps and other creatures in the original books. Even after Piglet learns what the discussion "thesaurus" ways, he still imagines it to be an animal.

Penguin

Penguin

Penguin is a toy penguin seen in a Winnie the Pooh book.

Queen Elizabeth Two and Prince George of Cambridge

Queen Elizabeth II

Appears in the volume Winnie-the-Pooh Meets the Queen. Together with Pooh, she celebrated her 90th birthday.

Prince George of Cambridge

Prince George of Cambridge has an appearance in the story when Piglet presents him with a red balloon. George is not named but is described as "much younger than Christopher Robin and virtually as bouncy as Tigger".

Characters in Disney

Mr. Narrator

Mr. Narrator

The storyteller who speaks off-screen. Sometimes the characters, who are aware that they are in a book, speak with him while facing him. They sometimes affectionately call him "Mr. Narrator". He sometimes uses his position to help the characters, since he can manipulate the book and pages. Some stories, such every bit Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin accept a narrator, but omit the "volume" feature, so the characters are unaware of him. Welcome to Pooh Corner is the only time when viewers really see his face. He does not appear at all in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, Piglet's Big Motion picture (but in the movie) and Pooh's Heffalump Movie (in Pooh's Heffalump Pic, Pooh is the narrator). He is the only Disney-merely character who returns for Winnie the Pooh. Typically, he speaks with a Southern-English accent.

Voiced past Sebastian Cabot, Laurie Master, David Warner, John Hurt, Roger L. Jackson, Roy Dotrice, David Ogden Stiers, Michael York and John Cleese

Gopher

Gopher

Gopher is a buck toothed gopher with a addiction of whistling out his sibilant consonants. He is based on the beaver in Lady and the Tramp. He oftentimes accidentally falls into one of the many holes he makes in the forest ground past forgetting to watch where he is going. Gopher first appears in Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree and regularly breaks the fourth wall by pointing out that he is "not in the book", though this could simply mean that he is 'non in the Phone Volume', and the purpose of his statement being to become better business. Originally, he was intended to replace Piglet, just he later became his own character. He as well appears in Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Twenty-four hour period with a smaller function, warning Pooh nearly the "Windsday".

Gopher is a much more prominent character in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. The series depicts him as a hard worker who takes pride in building tunnels and doing other work, and enjoys blowing things upwardly with dynamite. Gopher and Rabbit frequently disagree with and mutter at each other. In the episode "Lights Out", he is afraid of the dark (mostly instigated by Tigger'southward claims of unsafe creatures down there). His grandfather also appears. Gopher's most recent appearances were in A Winnie the Pooh Thanksgiving, Winnie the Pooh: A Valentine for You lot and Boo to You Too! Winnie the Pooh. The latter was included as part of Pooh'due south Heffalump Halloween Movie. Gopher was notably absent-minded from the 2011 film.

Voiced by Howard Morris (1966-1977) and virtually recently Michael Gough (1988-present).

Robert Rabbit

Robert Rabbit

Robert Rabbit is the brother of Rabbit who appears in Welcome to Pooh Corner. Is shown to be like to Rabbit, with a few differences - he wears a blackness hat, glasses, black bowtie, and a vest. Robert first appeared in the episode Hello, How-do-you-do There, in which Piglet was nervous about meeting him.

Bus driver

Bus driver

He is appearance in Pooh'southward Peachy Schoolhouse Bus Adventure.

Kessie

Kessie

Kessie is a bird with a white belly. She debuted as a baby bird and later grew up in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh episode "Notice Her, Keep Her". Kessie is cheerful, brave and eager to show herself. Rabbit saved her from a snowstorm and she came to alive with him. Every bit a baby, she nicknamed him "Rabbie". Rabbit was very protective of her and initially didn't want her flying. After she finally learned to wing, she migrated south for the winter, despite a reluctant Rabbit, but returned in "A Bird in the Hand" as an adult. She is Pooh's happy, responsible, ironic bird. In later appearances, she has reverted to being a immature bird. After actualization in Seasons of Giving, Kessie was relaunched as a main graphic symbol in The Volume of Pooh, her outset regular role, though afterward the series, Kessie is never seen or mentioned once again. The kestrel bird was voiced past Laura Mooney, Tracy Rowe, Stephanie D'Abruzzo and about recently Amanda Maddock, Amber Hood and Tara Strong.

Christopher Robin's Mom

Christopher Robin's Mom

Appearing only in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh and in The Book of Pooh: Stories from the Eye, Christopher Robin's mother's face is never shown. She is normally seen from behind, and when we run into the front of her, she is ordinarily seen from the chest down. She enforces the rules on her son, but is ordinarily calm and patient with him and loves him very much. His father is never seen or mentioned. Only like her son, she has light brownish hair.

Voiced past Patricia Parris and most recently Vicki Kenderes-Eibner. The character as well appears near the get-go of the alive-action motion-picture show Christopher Robin, portrayed by Katy Carmichael

Piglet's Shadow

Piglet's, Pooh'due south and Tigger'due south Shadows

They appear in the episode "Me and My Shadow". Piglet's Shadow is the main graphic symbol in this episode. Tigger's Shadow appears likewise in episode "Tigger'southward Shadow of a Doubt"

Scary trees

Scary trees

Evil living copse that tend to affright those who meet them. They commencement appeared in "Me and My Shadow". In Boo to You lot Too! Winnie the Pooh Piglet encounters two of them while fleeing in the wood. They are appearance in "Tigger Dear Hunt" the game.

Spookable

Ghosts and spookables

They are ofttimes mentioned. They scare the members of Hundred Acre Wood.

Santa Claus

Santa Claus

Santa Claus is a jolly one-time human being who lives in the north pole and brings gifts to people at Christmas time. In Winnie the Pooh and Christmas Likewise, Pooh and his friends write messages for Santa Claus telling him about the gifts they'd like to receive. Unfortunately, Pooh forgets to send the letters and is non able to deliver them personally, for the n pole is also far away, so he decides to wearable a white beard and a red accommodate and build improvised gifts for his friends. However, they soon realize that Pooh is non the existent Santa. Still, on Christmas day, Pooh and the gang receive the gifts they had asked, pregnant Santa somehow knew what they wanted afterward all.

Santa Claus appeared for the first time in the series in Pooh'southward Super Sleuth Christmas Movie, a film release for the series My Friends Tigger & Pooh. Darby and the other Super Sleuths visited the North Pole in club to render one of his reindeer trainees, Holly. Santa granted the characters' various Christmas wishes, including allowing Eeyore to join the team pulling his sleigh. In this special, Santa was voiced by Jeffrey Tambor.

Skullasaurus

Skullasaurus

The Skullasaurus is the fake sole antagonist made up past Owl in Pooh'due south Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin. Anybody assumed information technology had kidnapped Christopher Robin and taken him to the Skull Cave, but this was proved to be fake, where Christopher Robin went to schoolhouse and Owl read the note incorrectly. At the Upside Down Rock, Rabbit reads the curse dirge on the map saying, "The upside down rock. If you lot've fabricated information technology this far, you're where monsters are." which is the curse has upon and heard of the howl in afar. Upon hearing the creature'southward roars over again, Christopher Robin explains that they are only the growls of Pooh's tum.

Turkey

Turkey

A turkey only appeared in the special A Winnie the Pooh Thanksgiving.

Winifred

Winifred is the proper noun of an unseen daughter that Christopher Robin was seen writing a letter to in the television receiver special Winnie the Pooh: A Valentine for You. This graphic symbol was also mentioned in Very Best Friends, a book adaptation of the special. Footling is known about Winifred, other than that she was a daughter that Christopher Robin obviously harbored some affection for, believing to be his girlfriend. Pooh and his friends were worried that Christopher Robin might intendance about this new friend of his more than them, but he told them that he would always have a special place for them in his eye.

Lumpy

Lumpy

Heffridge Trumpler Brompet "Lumpy" Heffalump, Iv is a immature lavender heffalump with a tuft of majestic hair on his head, a hirsuite bobble-tail and a british emphasis. He lives in a office of the forest called Heffalump Hollow with his mother. He has a stuffed alligator named Alvin and enjoys a snack called rumpledoodles. Lumpy debuts in the 2005 characteristic film Pooh's Heffalump Motion picture. The characters were initially afraid of Heffalumps and set out to capture 1. Too, Lumpy'southward mother told him not to leave Heffalump Hollow considering of scary creatures outside of it. After Roo "captured" Lumpy, they became proficient friends and no one was afraid of each other anymore. Lumpy also features in Pooh'southward Heffalump Halloween Movie and also My Friends Tigger & Pooh, making his final appearance in the episode "Darby Gets Lemons, Makes Lemonade".

Lumpy'due south Mom

Lumpy's Mom

She is biggest resident of the Hundred Acre Wood. She first appears in Pooh's Heffalump Picture saving Roo from existence trapped in a pile of logs, and later appears in episodes of My Friends Tigger & Pooh.

Voiced by Brenda Blethyn/Patricia Parris.

Gobloon

Gobloon

The Gobloon is a ferocious beast who appeared in Pooh'due south Heffalump Halloween Movie. Tigger said that every twelvemonth on Halloween he appears to await for people to catch and volition turn them into Jaggedy Lanterns if he catches them but if he'southward caught first it volition k it's captors a wish.

Piglet and Balloon

Balloon

The Airship, likewise known as B'loon, is a "grapheme" in the Winnie the Pooh 2011 movie. He is an inanimate object, but everyone treats him similar a real creature. The red balloon previously appeared in "Balloonatics", merely information technology'southward not known if it'southward the same.

Evelyn Robin

Evelyn Robin

Evelyn Robin is the wife of Christopher Robin and the mother of Madeline Robin. She is often worried nearly her husband'due south workaholic tendencies, considering it means that he spends less time with his family and often wishes her married man would be more than featherbrained and fun loving and spend more fourth dimension with her and Madeline. She discovers that Winnie the Pooh and the other blimp animals of the Hundred Acre Forest are alive.

Madeline Robin

Madeline Robin

Madeline Robin is the daughter of Christopher and Evelyn Robin. Much like Christopher was at her age, Madeline is kind, friendly and brave. Madeline is worried about her father's workaholic tendencies, since it ways he spends less fourth dimension with Madeline. She is one of the few people too Christopher that knows Winnie the Pooh and the rest of the Hundred Acre Forest residents are alive.

Giles Winslow Jr.

Giles Winslow Jr.

The main adversary of the 2018 film, Christopher Robin. He is Christopher Robin's ex-boss at Winslow Luggages.

Giles Winslow Sr.

Giles Winslow Sr.

Giles Winslow Jr.'s father.

Christopher Robin's Neighbor

Too-friendly neighbor who e'er wants to come over for a game of cards.

The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh characters

Birdzilla

Birdzilla and other monsters from moving-picture show

Birdzilla is the titular graphic symbol of a fictional monster movie which Pooh, Tigger, Piglet and Christopher Robin lookout in the cinema in "Pooh Oughta Exist In Pictures", the airplane pilot episode of The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. It is a parody of the film Godzilla. In the film Birdzilla destroying an unspecified city and battling other monsters, such as a giant spider-similar beast with a proboscis which spits a nasty-looking substance.

Usher

Conductor

He appeared in the episode "Pooh Oughta Exist in Pictures",

Junior Heffalump

Inferior Heffalump

Junior Heffalump is the son of Mama and Papa Heffalump in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. He only appears in "There's No Campsite Like Home" and "Trap as Trap Can".

Papa Heffalump

Papa Heffalump

Papa Heffalump is the patriarchal head of a modest family of heffalumps in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. He appears in the episodes, "There's No Army camp Like Habitation" and "Trap equally Trap Can". He is voiced by James Gallego. A recurring gag in both of these episodes is that Papa is allergic to so many different things and even to some basic ideas and concepts, such as heights and the thought of Inferior failing. Some of the things he is allergic to include: marshmallows, deep pits, animal fur, and deep holes. While he does act before he thinks, he tries to be a good begetter to Junior and mate to Mama, despite his goofy antics. Like Pooh Behave, he has a item love for honey (a common trait shared amid heffalumps and Pooh bears), to the point where the mere sight of information technology is enough to crusade his feet to motility up and down uncontrollably (he describes this as his "honey anxiety"). He also has certain abilities that he puts to proficient utilize, like the power to retain huge amounts of water at ane fourth dimension, and the power to climb trees very rapidly.

Mama Heffalump

Mama Heffalump

Mama Heffalump is the married woman of Papa Heffalump and the mother of Inferior Heffalump in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. Her only appearance was "There'due south No Camp Like Home" and she too appeared in "Trap as Trap Can".

Laughing Hyena

Laughing Hyena

The Laughing Hyena is a character featured in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh . He is voiced by Ken Sansom. He is native to the jungle located about the Land of Milk and Honey. He simply appeared in the episode The Piglet Who Would Be King.

Gorilla Conductor and his ring

Gorilla Conductor and his band

A band of monkeys. They are native to the jungle located about the Land of Milk and Dearest. They are appeared in the episode The Piglet Who Would Be King.

Horned Heffalumps

Horned Heffalumps

A herd of running horned heffalumps. They are native to the jungle located nearly the State of Milk and Honey. They are only appeared in the episode The Piglet Who Would Be King.

Pygmy Piglets

Pygmy Piglets

The Pygmy Piglets only appear in "The Piglet Who Would Be King", an episode of The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. They are about half the pinnacle of Piglet and are all clad in white vesture. They reside in the Land of Milk and Honey, which is where Piglet and his friends go to collect more honey for Pooh. They proclaim Piglet their king and a spring from a broken Jack-in-the-box, given to Piglet every bit a friendship nowadays from Pooh, is thought to be the tail of a Piglet statue with a honey fountain. When the bound is removed subsequently, the volcano of honey erupts, but Piglet, with the assistance of the Pygmies, diverts the honey menses using two statues and is hailed equally a hero.

Crud

Crud

Grime is an evil slime monster from The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh episode, "Cleanliness is Next to Impossible". He lived under Christopher Robin's bed, presumably created from all the dirt and grime from Christopher Robin not cleaning his room or vacuuming under the bed. He wants to rule the whole world by making it dirty and wants to employ Christopher Robin to aid him do this considering he believes that without him putting his belongings under the bed, Crud's kingdom would not have been possible. He has a sidekick named Smudge. Despite existence a Winnie the Pooh grapheme, Crud is dark and malevolent. He intends to make the world more dirty past spreading his dirt and grime everywhere with his opposite vacuum, and loses his atmosphere if anyone talks about cleaning and washing, fifty-fifty claiming that he hates the words "clean" and "done upward," as he hates being cleaned upwardly. With his messy slimy exterior and his reverse vacuum cleaner, he plans to force Christopher Robin to help him make the world dirty.

Smudge

Smudge

Smudge is a minor talking brawl of cerise orangish and green grit, and the secondary antagonist of The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh episode, "Cleanliness is Next to Impossible". He is voiced by Jim Cummings. Smudge is the loftier-pitched minion of the ruler of the filthy Under the Bed kingdom, Crud. Smudge has 2 main hobbies: uncontrollable sneezing and praising Grime, calling him respectful names like "the principal of mud," "the surveyor of slime," "the guru of garbage" and "the wiseman of waste matter." Smudge has a special ability to slither effectually incredibly fast.

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Crayon Soldiers

Christopher Robin's crayons that fell under the bed. Crud used them to kidnap Christopher Robin's friends.

Christopher Robin's Toys

Yo-Yo and other Christopher Robin's toys

Grime uses some of Christopher'southward toys every bit his slaves.

Aunt Edna

Christopher Robin's aunt. She is mentioned in "Cleanliness is Next to Impossible" and "Dwelling Is Where the Abode Is".

Stan the Woozle

Stan the Woozle is 1 of the two honey thieves who appears every bit a minor antagonist in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. He is one of the two main antagonists of The Great Beloved Pot Robbery and A Bird in the Hand. He is voiced by Ken Sansom, who as well voiced Rabbit in Winnie The Pooh. Different Heff, Stan is a woozle and the brusque-tempered and selfish leader of the two. He seems to be bellyaching past Heff's stupidity and his fear of mice. For example, Stan says, "I hate it when he does that", after Heff is frightened past Roo. His personality is calm, stray, snarky, treacherous, arrogant, negative, wicked, obsequious, offensive, zany, loathsome, earnest, sneaky, thoughtless, annoying, narcissistic, wrathful, observant, obnoxious, zesty, lion-hearted, eager, sadistic, temperamental, austere, nefarious, menacing, ambitious, tough, testy, shrewd, thankless, attentive, noisy, mean, accountable, thoughtful, trustworthy and somewhat intelligent.

Stan, Heff and Wooster

Heff the Heffalump

Heff the Heffalump is one of two love thieves who appears as a minor antagonist in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. He appears as i of the two main antagonists of The Great Dear Pot Robbery and A Bird in the Hand. He is voiced by Chuck McCann. Dissimilar Stan, Heff is a heffalump. His personality is loud, easily scared, helpful, emotional, funny, fearful, thoughtless, hard-working, efficient, happy-become-lucky, eager, fussy, feisty, circumspect, laid-back, ungenerous, malicious, persistent, hyperactive, envious, finnicky, fun-loving, hot-headed, exuberant, frolicsome, faint-hearted, annoying, loquacious, uncompromising, hateful-spirited, prissy and foolish.

Wooster

Wooster is the gigantic woozle who appears as the quondam secondary antagonist in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh mystery-one-act episode "The Great Beloved Pot Robbery". He is one of the two henchmen of Stan the Woozle the other being Heff the Heffalump. When Rabbit, Tigger, Roo, and Piglet try to warn him of the villains' arrival, Pooh lets them come. Stan, Heff, and Wooster soon face the light-headed old bear at his "brunchfast" where they try to intimidate him and his friends. Instead of giving in, Pooh decides to convince Wooster that simply asking for Honey instead of stealing is a much better solution to getting what you want. Stan and Heff try to say otherwise, simply Pooh tells him about friendship and how it'south better to share and ask with friends and fifty-fifty shows that he wants to be his friend too. Wooster is convinced and turns over to Pooh's side, asks for dear politely he actually says "please" which appalls Stan, and ultimately becomes friends with the Pooh, Piglet, Rabbit, Tigger, and Roo. A betrayed Stan and Heff get out with a vow that even though they have both a behemothic mouse (Roo) and a giant woozle, they'd exist back and that they'd somehow get that honey.

Bruno

Bruno

Bruno is a pocket-size character that was featured in the tv series, The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. His only known appearance is in the episode "Monkey See, Monkey Do Better". Bruno is a current of air-up robot gorilla toy who was in a gift in Christopher Robin's sleeping room and he introduces himself every bit the all-time toy anyone tin can accept. Rabbit accidentally unwraps it after Pooh told him that the souvenir doesn't belong to them. He comes off equally very big-headed because of his status as "the greatest toy a kid could get". This makes him believe that he is capable of replacing Pooh, Tigger, Rabbit, and Piglet as Christopher Robin's friends. When the male child tells him that nothing could ever supplant them, this sends Bruno into a phase of self-denial as he walks off by himself and allows himself to literally unwind. Afterward the gang winds him back up, Bruno is touched by their concern and is informed that he was intended for a unlike kid, a friend of Christopher Robin'due south. He is thrilled by this news and eagerly allows himself to be packaged back up and sent to the kid in question.

Tammy the Bodyguard

Tammy the Babysitter

Tammy the Babysitter is a teenage girl who babysat Christopher Robin while his female parent went out in the episode Babysitter Dejection. Though she tries to be strict, simply often tin exist stressed out, she does accept a caring heart for Christopher Robin. She's played by Jackie Gonneau.

Ted, Pinky and Vacuum Caput

Ted, Pinky, and Vacuum Head

Three stuff animals who expect like Pooh, Piglet, and Tigger, but resemble gangsters. They only appear in "How Much is That Rabbit in the Window" where they try to steal Rabbit's tag in hopes of getting someone to buy them from the toy store. The store's owner is patently unaware that they are alive. Eventually, they succeed in stealing the tag and rip it into three pieces in hopes of getting sold. Later on Christopher Robin bought Rabbit, he encourages them to continue waiting and that someone will buy them 1 day. They and then take Rabbit'south advice and go on to await to exist sold.

The Clerk

The Clerk

The man who works in a toy store. He appeared in an episode "How Much is That Rabbit in the Window".

Pack Rats

Pack Rats

Iii rodents (all voiced by Jim Cummings) who appear as recurring antagonists. They steal anything they can and go out a walnut in exchange, thinking it as payment. The orangish Pack Rat is fatty and dimwitted, the brown one is grumpy and complaining, and the gray 1 is their leader. They debut in "Zip But the Tooth" where they are more like existent villains, but in "The Rats Who Came to Dinner", they turn out to be misunderstood and actually help the characters. All the same, they always return to their urge to steal. Their tertiary and final appearance is in "Oh, Bottle!"

Prairie Dogs

Prairie Dogs

They appeared in the episode "Paw and Lodge"

Nasty Jack

Nasty Jack and his gang

The leader of a gang of literal horse thieves who appeared in the episode Mitt and Gild in the Sheriff Piglet play. He threatened to trounce Piglet. After Piglet'due south bluecoat cruel off, Jack was disappointed that he wasn't sheriff anymore. Piglet made him sheriff, something Jack ever wanted to be. Shortly, Jack threatened to trounce his former gang and they ran away. Voiced by Jim Cummings.

Sharks

They are mentioned in the episodes "The Wishing Conduct" and "Oh, Canteen!"

The Crawly Bunny of Upsy Dasia

A nonexistent relative of the Rabbit, invented by him. Piglet misunderstands Tigger when he explains where he got the shoes from and thinks information technology's the "Awful Bunny of Upside-Downsia".

The ghost of Long John Cottontails

Long John Cottontail

Long John Cottontail is Rabbit's deceased peachy-great uncle. He only appears in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh episode "Rabbit Marks the Spot". Rabbit is annoyed at Pooh, Piglet, Tigger and Gopher for digging up his garden when pretending to exist pirates, so he buries a treasure breast total of rocks in the ground and tells them information technology was the treasure of Long John Cottontail. He gives them a map showing where it is. They notice it (despite Rabbit regretting his action and trying to stop them). Rabbit admits that he buried the rocks, only Pooh, Piglet, Tigger and Gopher still believe it was Long John Cottontail, and the rocks were very useful to them. The ghost of Long John Cottontail and so appears and says that the animals constitute his buried rocks, which scares them all away. He is confused as to why they are scared of him, ending the episode.

Bully Bamboozler

Bully Bamboozler

In episode "Eeyore'due south Tail Tale" after Tigger runs out of clues, Eeyore suggests they get to Piglet'due south, and they see him building a "Bully Bamboozler" out of a ballon and Eeyore's tail, and Piglet is caught (for "looking like Tigger'southward Wanted poster"), but then Pooh notices the "Bully Bamboozler", and Tigger bounces it and pops it, much to Piglet's dismay, only for Owl to accept the tail.

Catch-Me Gotcha

The Take hold of-Me Gotcha is an mentioned character in the "Pooh Moon". Rabbit says that it doesn't exist.

Torbit and Ophelia

Dexter, Ophelia and Torbit

Owl's uncle and aunt. They are parents of Dexter. They only appearance in episode "Owl in the Family".

Dexter

Dexter is Owl'due south cousin who appeared in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh episodes, "Mitt and Order", "Owl in the Family" and "The Bug Stops Hither". He is an owlet about Roo's historic period, whom he is very good friends with, and wears red glasses. His parents are Owl'south Uncle Torbit and Aunt Ophelia. He is very close with his cousin Owl and ofttimes repeats his cousin'southward famous quote: "It reminds me of the time..." One of Dexter's famous quotes is: "Indubitably."

April Fool

He is lilliputian antagonist of episode "April Pooh".

Grandad Gopher

Gramps Gopher

Gopher's grandfather who prefers to "dream" rather than "do". Gopher calls him "Grandpappy". He appears in "To Dream the Incommunicable Scheme" during the "Pewter Pickaxe" contest that Gopher is desperate to encounter him win by building an above-footing underground urban center. He likewise appears briefly in "Piece of cake Come, Like shooting fish in a barrel Gopher" and is mentioned in "Grown But Not Forgotten". Voiced by Jim Cummings.

The Slusher

Antagonist of episode "Sorry, Wrong Slusher". Character from film named The Slusher Who Slushed Everyone So Went Back to Slush Them Over again.

Christopher Robin's Neighbour

Christopher Robin's Neighbor

Christopher Robin's neighbor appears in "Sorry Incorrect Slusher" where he calls the police. He is mentioned in "A Pooh Day Afternoon". He has a canis familiaris named Skippy.

Skippy the Sheepdog

Skippy the Sheepdog

A very large sheepdog belonging to a neighbour of Christopher Robin's. He appears in "Sorry, Wrong Slusher" and "A Pooh Day Afternoon". He is a nice dog, merely sometimes makes trouble for the characters. Piglet is afraid of him (equally shown in "Deplorable, Wrong Slusher", where he thinks Skippy is the "slusher" that Christopher Robin and the animals are afraid of). Dissimilar other animate being characters, Skippy is not anthropomorphized. He'll only obey Christopher Robin whenever he hears the sound of a horn, or when Tigger imitates the horn's sound past yelling, "SQUANKY!". His vocal effects are performed by Jim Cummings.

The Man on TV

The Man on TV

He is advent in"Sorry Incorrect Slusher" in a pizza ad.

The Pizza Commitment Guy

He is appearance in"Sorry Wrong Slusher".

The Estimate

The Judge

He is appearance in"Sad Incorrect Slusher".

The Grocer

The Grocer

The human who works at the grocery. He only appeared in "A Pooh Day Afternoon".

The Man riding a motorbike

The Human riding a motorbike

He only appeared in "A Pooh 24-hour interval Afternoon".

The bust statue of Grandfather Eustace

Grandfather Eustace

His bust statue is appearance in episode "Habitation Is Where the Dwelling Is".

My Friends Tigger & Pooh characters

Darby

Darby

Darby is a half-dozen-twelvemonth-sometime tomboyish red-headed girl who stars in My Friends Tigger & Pooh. She is the leader of the problem-solving Super Sleuths along with Tigger, Pooh and Buster. They are the only 4 characters to appear in every episode. Darby is brave, inquisitive, clever and imaginative. Her catchphrases are "Fourth dimension to slap my cap" and "Expert sleuthin', anybody!" and "See ya later." For the most part, she replaced Christopher Robin, who rarely appears in the My Friends Tigger and Pooh, but the episode "Christopher Froggin'" reveals that she is best friends with Christopher Robin. After the cancellation of the series, she and other new characters from the serial stopped appearing. Darby has been voiced past Chloë Grace Moretz and Kimberlea Berg.

Buster

Buster

Buster is Darby'south beloved, happy, dumb, and curious pet puppy in My Friends Tigger & Pooh. He is white and wears a red collar with a gilt tag. He does not appear to be any recognizable brood of domestic dog. He appears in every episode and is a fellow member of the Super Sleuths. Though he often seems to be but tagging forth with the group, he is often a valuable nugget in their piece of work. Buster likes to yap loudly when he is excited or on the smell of something.

Porcupine

Porcupine

Porcupine tin can play the flute and has a passion for cooking but cannot see without her glasses. She is a close friend with Turtle, who is the only grapheme who can hug her because of her precipitous quills. They were pen pals before he came to the forest. Voiced by Tara Strong.

Beaver

Beaver

Beaver lives in a dam near Poohsticks Span. He bears a strong resemblance to Gopher, who does non appear in My Friends Tigger & Pooh. Both are hard working rodents with similar appearances and personalities, although Beaver is a trivial more than easygoing. Voiced by Jim Cummings.

Woodpecker

Woodpecker

Woodpecker is an absent-minded-minded woodpecker who irritates Rabbit past pecking on his house and talks in a fast, bouncy and high-pitched voice. Although Owl does not appear in the series, Woodpecker does share some characteristics with him. Voiced by Dee Bradley Baker.

Turtle

Turtle

Turtle has been Porcupine's friend and pen pal since earlier he came to live in the forest. He lives a slow and piece of cake life, moves slowly, and speaks with a southeastern U.s. accent. Turtle enjoys placidity activities like bird watching or playing checkers with his friends. Because of his shell, he is the only character who can hug Porcupine. Voiced past Marker Hamill.

Snowman Song.webp

The Snowmen

A grouping of giant snowmen who but announced in Super Sleuth Christmas Motion-picture show. When Darby and friends come up beyond them, they come alive. Piglet is frightened of them, but Holly explains that they are not dangerous and are going to lead them to the Due north Pole. The snowmen then dance and sing around them earlier revealing the fashion to the North Pole for the gang. They are non seen again afterwards.

Holly and parents

Holly

Holly is one of Santa'south reindeer. She is appear in Super Sleuth Christmas Movie. Holly came to the forest to observe Santa's lost magic bag. The characters rescue her, aid her find the bag and accompany her home. When they achieve the Northward Pole, she flies for the showtime time. She returns for a visit in the episode "Home For the Holly Days". She is voiced by Makaila Baumel.

Vixen

Holly's mother. She is appear in Super Sleuth Christmas Movie.

Springs the Bouncing Robot

Springs the Billowy Robot

A bouncing robot who only appears in "Tigger Gets Bounced". Rabbit built Springs to replace Tigger's bouncing. Tigger and Springs compete in a billowy contest that ends with Springs winning, which gratefully hurts Tigger's feelings. After Beaver foolishly tries to use Springs to mash muddy water (fifty-fifty though Rabbit warns him that Springs isn't supposed to go wet), Springs and so short circuits and becomes hostile. Tigger battles Springs while protecting others from his rampage. After Tigger and Springs disappear backside a loma, an unseen fight is heard. In the end, Tigger comes out from behind the hill, concluding that he had defeated Springs (although Springs' remains are not seen after this).

Raccoon

Raccoon

Raccoon first appears in "Darby's Lost and Establish" and later makes regular appearances in the serial. He is in charge of a junk/fix-it shop. He speaks a bit like a hippie, and is annoyed when Tigger refers to his "mask", which is just function of his fur. Voiced past Rob Paulsen.

Possum Twins

Possum Twins

Twin possum siblings showtime appear in "Topsy Turvy Tigger", where they attempt to invite others to their birthday party through employ of upside-down drawings. They later appear in "Darby's Im-possum-ible Case", in which the characters are shown meeting them for the outset time. They look akin, just have opposite personalities. The male child is zippy and approachable, while the girl is shy and flees from crowds. Voiced by Sydney Saylor.

Skunk

Skunk

Skunk first appears in "Skunk's Non-Scents". He is initially upset that he cannot produce a skunk'southward foul odor. After it is revealed why and when skunks spray, he accomplishes it, pleasing himself. In "Beaver Gets Skunked", Beaver is reluctant to accept him due to skunks' reputation, but overcomes his prejudice and they become friends. Voiced past James Arnold Taylor.

Various animals

Bees

Bees

A swarm of bees makes their debut in the very first chapter. They live in the hive where Pooh tries to get his dearest. They ofttimes announced in nearly every version of the Disney adaptations. In that location appear to be several unlike beehives in the Hundred Acre Forest. Whenever Pooh and his friends encounter the bees, problem usually occurs with the bees going subsequently them.

Rabbit's Friends and Relations

Rabbit'due south Relatives

Many small mammals and insects in the books are collectively known every bit Rabbit'southward Friends and Relations. They do not generally exercise much or have much character evolution, and but a few of them are named.

  • Alexander Beetle is briefly mentioned on folio 119 of Winnie-the-Pooh, and he appears to accept become upset and hidden himself in a crevice for 2 days, so went to alive with his aunt. He is besides the subject area of a poem in Now We Are 6.
  • Small

    Pocket-sized (short for Very Pocket-sized Protrude) is the subject field of a search that Rabbit organizes to find him. Making his debut in My Friends Tigger & Pooh, he is the outset new Milne character to announced in the Disney adaptations since the debut of Tigger in Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day.
  • Henry Rush is a protrude. He had a cursory mention in The House at Pooh Corner, and has been expanded in Return to the Hundred Acre Wood. He attended the Spelling Bee, kept score at the cricket game, and danced at the Harvest Festival.
  • Late and Early are two friends mentioned briefly at the terminate of The House at Pooh Corner and expanded in Return to the Hundred Acre Forest. They attended Christopher Robin's coming home political party and received sugar mice. They also attended the Spelling Bee. Although it is never mentioned what species they are, illustrations point to them being mice.
  • Smallest-of-All, or S. of A. for short, is mentioned near the end of The House at Pooh Corner and nearly the start of Return to the Hundred Acre Woods. He has a tendency to be unsure of what he sees. His species is never revealed.
  • Rabbit's family unit appears alongside Rabbit in the books. Many relatives appear in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh episode "Party Poohper", Pooh's Heffalump Movie and he occasionally mentions them at other times in the Disney adaptations.

Crow

Crows

A flock of crows appears in several episodes of The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh trying to steal Rabbit's vegetables. There are commonly three or four of them. A bigger and more fiendish version of the crows appear only in "A Very Very Large Fauna" stealing nutrient from a picnic and eating corn in Rabbit's garden. A redesigned version of the crows appears briefly in Springtime with Roo.

Bugs

Bugs

Similar the crows, these bugs are considered pests to Rabbit's garden equally they endeavor to eat all of his vegetables, especially when they are led past their cunning leader. Besides, like the crows, Rabbit has fabricated many vain attempts to get rid of them, but they usually outsmart him and are often driven away past somebody other than Rabbit, with the exception of him sending them away using Eeyore'southward tail as a lure in "Eeyore'southward Tail Tale". They also announced in Rabbit's flashback in Winnie the Pooh: A Very Merry Pooh Yr. The leader of the bugs, especially the wearing apparel it wears, resembles Napoleon Bonaparte.

Squirrels

Squirrels

Squirrels are minor tree-climbing rodents and are among the almost ordinarily found animals in the Hundred Acre Forest. They practice not appear to be able to speak, although some accept accompanied Tigger in the vocal "Someone Like Me". A squirrel is one of the animals helped past Piglet in the kickoff of Piglet's Big Picture. Piglet uses a large rock as a back up to reach the nut the squirrel was trying to become. Squirrels are seen every so oftentimes in My Friends Tigger & Pooh-- Darby'due south dog Buster likes to chase them. He became muddy from doing and then in "Buster's Bathroom." In "Squirrels Will Exist Squirrels," squirrels make off with Buster's favorite chew toy. Squirrels are seen happily helping with both picnics in Tigger & Pooh and a Musical Besides.

Mice

Mice

Mice are small rodents that appear during the songs Someone Like Me in The Tigger Movie and Pooh's Heffalump Moving picture and many Disney books, among others. They are also mentioned in The Bang-up Dear Pot Robbery. Heff the Heffalump is afraid of them.

Tigger and bats

Bats

Bats are nocturnal flying mammals. They appear in the picture Pooh'southward Grand Adventure when they scared the Tigger in the Skull Cave. They also appear in the song Someone Like Me in The Tigger Movie and the game Tigger'due south Honey Chase.

Bird

Birds

The Hundred Acre Wood has many colorful birds that chirp often in the morning time.

Fish

Fish

Many species of fish swim in the rivers and lakes of the Hundred Acre Wood. In episode Fish Out of the H2o mutton-caput trout has a migration in the Hundred Acre Wood.

Frog

Frogs

Frogs are small amphibious animals that tin can ofttimes exist found near waters in the Hundred Acre Wood. There are various species of frogs, almost of which take a short torso, a wide mouth and very long hindlimbs used for jumping and swimming. Dissimilar other animals in the Hundred Acre Woods, frogs seem to be unable to speak. A group of striped frogs is found past Pooh, Piglet and Eeyore in The Tigger Film. When Eeyore sees them jumping around the water, he wonders if they could be relatives of Tigger. Unfortunately, Pooh and Piglet'south attempts to communicate with the frogs are unsuccessful. A frog is seen slurping honey in the 2011 Winnie-the-Pooh film.

Piglet and Collywobbles

Caterpillar

Butterflies

Butterflies are colorful insects that fly beyond the Hundred Acre Woods. In The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, the recurring gag was that the butterfly would sit on Eeyore's house and smash it. A grouping of lavander butterflies is the only inhabitants of The Prissy Peaceful Spot. In the Hundred Acre Wood also lives butterfly larvae, or caterpillars.

Dragonfly

Dragonflies

The dragonfly appears in Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore when it was accidentally mistaken for a stick by Roo. They also appear in Pooh's Heffalump Movie.

Ants

Ants

Ants are minor insects that have a significant role in A Very, Very Large Animal, in which they make a cake for Piglet and aid him understand that he is non the smallest and that at that place are creatures smaller than him. They also announced in My Friends Tigger and Pooh and Tigger & Pooh and Musical Also.

Piglet and the ladybug

Ladybug

The ladybug appears in Piglet'south Big Film. Piglet helps to switch to the 2d plant.

Termite

Termite

Tigger's friend from episode "Tigger's Houseguest". Tigger he calls a "blue-faced, yellow-bellied housefly".

Fleas

They are advent in episode "Tigger'southward Houseguest". Tigger has decided to get-go a circus with them.

Groundhogs

They are mentioned in episode "Groundpiglet Day".

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Source: https://pooh.fandom.com/wiki/List_of_Winnie_the_Pooh_characters

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