This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities...
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT
    • Politics
    • Transport
    • Lifestyle
    • Community
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Environment
    • Health
    • Education
    • Sport
    • Harrogate
    • Ripon
    • Knaresborough
    • Boroughbridge
    • Pateley Bridge
    • Masham
  • What's On
  • Offers
  • Newsletter
  • Podcasts

Interested in advertising with us?

Advertise with us

  • News & Features
  • Your Area
  • What's On
  • Offers
  • Newsletter
  • Podcasts
  • Politics
  • Transport
  • Lifestyle
  • Community
  • Business
  • Crime
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Education
  • Sport
Advertise with us
Subscribe
  • Home
  • In Your Area
  • Harrogate

We want to hear from you

Tell us your opinions and views on what we cover

Contact us

Register for our newsletter

Free Newsletter Sign Up

Join now
Connect with us
  • About us
  • Correction and complaints
Download on App StoreDownload on Google Play Store
  • Website Terms & Conditions
  • Subscription Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Statement
  • Comments Participation T&Cs
Trust In Journalism

Copyright © 2020 The Stray Ferret Ltd, All Rights Reserved

Site by Show + Tell

Subscribe to trusted local news

If you are accessing this story via Facebook but you are a subscriber then you will be unable to access the story. Facebook wants you to stay and read in the app and your login details are not shared with Facebook. If you experience problems with accessing the news but have subscribed, please contact subscriptions@thestrayferret.co.uk. In a time of both misinformation and too much information, quality journalism is more crucial than ever. By subscribing, you can help us get the story right.

  • Subscription costs less than £1 a week with an annual plan.

Already a subscriber? Log in here.

25

May

Last Updated: 22/05/2026
Harrogate
Harrogate

Bishop Monkton residents receive ‘death threats’ due to cockerel topiary felling

by Flora Grafton

| 25 May, 2026
Comment

0

cockerellcottage2019
The cockerel in 2019. Pic: Bishop Monkton Today

More than two years have passed since an extraordinary topiary in a village near Ripon was felled – but its impact still rumbles on.

A 30ft topiary cockerel stood proudly in front of a grade two-listed cottage called Burngarth in Bishop Monkton for more than 100 years until it was cut down in April 2024. 

It had been a feature of the village for generations and its felling led to furore among villagers at the time.

But the ill-feeling appears to live on, as a post on the Bishop Monkton Together Facebook group by Dave Molyneux, who lives at Burngarth with his partner Linda, revealed the ordeal has led to the couple receiving “death threats”.

The threats came after, Mr Molyneux claimed, a Daily Mail article published last month, which reported the topiary had been replaced by a gargoyle. 

Mr Molyneux's post last week said:

For those few in the village that [sic] feel the need to keep the story of the removal of the cockerel going, which in turn prompted the Daily Mail to write another completely one-sided article again, you should hang your heads in shame.

Since this article, we have now received death threats – YES, death threats – leaving us traumatised and in fear for ourselves. This cannot be right, death threats!

burngarthearly

The cockerel in the 1920. Pic: Bishop Monkton Yesterday

Background

Mr Molyneux said cutting down the topiary was not a “rash decision”, and claimed the previous owners of the house had “neglected the cockerel regarding its size”.

He added: 

With the height came the expanded width and depth of the bush, to an extent where it broke two panes of window glass and completely blocked out the light of two windows, leaving these rooms in complete darkness 365 days of the year.

The original bush was placed less than a metre away from the front of the house, causing substantial damage, and was never designed to be the size it was left to grow to.

If it had been kept at the size it had been for many years in the mid-eighties, the concerning elements wouldn’t have come into effect.

Mr Molyneux said the couple paid a “considerable amount of money” to the British Topiary Society to reduce the cockerel, but once work on it began, it became clear that “the growth inside was actually dead due to it not being maintained properly”.

The post added the impact of the hedge’s scale only became clear after they moved into Burngarth. The couple offered residents the chance to “rehome” the cockerel, but there were no takers.

The ordeal has left the couple with “deep scars”, Mr Molyneux said, adding they feel they are “being driven out of the village we loved”.

“This isn’t right or fair on us, and I’m sure if you had death threats, your views would be different”, the post said.

Mr Molyneux thanked “the majority of the village” for their support and said he hopes a line can be drawn under the issue. 

The owners ‘tried to work with the cockerel’

At the time of the felling, Gary Cross, landlord of the Masons Arms in Bishop Monkton, defended the owners’ decision to fell the cockerel.

He said:

It was a pretty big object and attraction. Some residents are very upset about it. But they don't have to live next to it.

With the beck flooding, a lot of their garden was subject to flooding and it held pools of water, which was difficult to deal with. The owners have been there two or three years and tried to work with the cockerel, but it had just become so big.

Mr Cross added residents had been “rude and vicious” about the situation but said the hedge had been “carefully cut”.

In addition, North Yorkshire Council launched an investigation into the felling following complaints of a potential breach of planning control.

However, in a letter to residents at the time, seen by the Stray Ferret, a planning enforcement officer said “no breaches” had taken place.

The officer concluded the cockerel was a hedge, not a tree, and therefore didn’t require the council’s consent to be cut down.

The case was closed after no planning breaches were identified.

The Stray Ferret contacted Mr Molyneux for comment, but we did not receive a response. 

StarFelling Bishop Monkton topiary cockerel did not breach planning, council saysStarHarrogate village shocked after 30ft topiary cockerel cut down