Bonfire night is fast approaching so we have compiled a list of events coming up this weekend in the Harrogate district.
Bonfires in Masham and Bilton were cancelled this year but we have still managed to find nine that are due to go ahead either on Friday, Saturday or Sunday.
Let us know if we have missed your event and we will add it to the list email contact@thestrayferret.co.uk or call us on 01423 276197 and we will add you to the list.
Friday 5th November
Knaresborough Cricket Club Fireworks Night
Where: Aspin Lane, Knaresborough, HG5 8EP
When: 6:15pm start, 7pm firework display
Tickets: adult £2, concessions £1
Aspin Park Academy, Knaresborough
Where: School grounds, parking on Manse Lane, Knaresborough
When: 5pm start, 6.30pm firework display
Tickets: Advance online booking – adults £4, children £3, family ticket £12, preschoolers free. On the gate – adults £5, children £4
Ripon Rowels Rotary Charity Bonfire and Firework Display
Where: Ripon Racecourse, Boroughbridge Road, Ripon, HG4 1UG
When: 5:30pm start, 7pm fire lit, 7:30pm firework display.
Tickets: adults £6, children £3, family (2 adult, 2 child) £12, under 3s free
Spofforth Village Firework Display
Where: Spofforth cricket ground
Timings: Gates open 5pm
Tickets: Under 16s must be accompanied by an adult.
Tockwith & District Agricultural Society Annual Bonfire & Firework Display
Where: Show field, Cattle Moor Lane, Tockwith, YO26 7QH
Timings: 6pm start, 6:30pm fire lit, 7pm fireworks
Tickets: 13 and over £5, under 13s free
Saturday 6th November
50th Annual Stray Bonfire, Harrogate Roundtable
Where: The Stray, Harrogate, HG1 1BJ
When: 6pm start, 6:30pm fire lit, 7pm fireworks
Tickets: free entry, donations welcome
Upper Nidderdale Scouts Group Pateley Bonfire
Where: Pateley Bridge Showground
When: 5:30pm bonfire lit, 7pm fireworks
Tickets: free entry, donations welcome
Wath and Melmerby Community Bonfire
Where: Roger Clarke Motor Engineers, The Sidings, Melmerby, HG4 5EX
When: 6pm bonfire lit, 7pm fireworks
Tickets: £5 per family
Sunday 7th November
Staveley Arms Bonfire
Where: The Staveley Arms, Greenfields, North Stainley, Ripon, HG4 3HT
When: 4pm-6pm
Tickets: £3 per person
Swinton Bivouac Quiet Bonfire Night
Where: Swinton Bivouac, Masham, Ilton, Ripon, HG4 4JZ
When: 6:30pm bonfire lit. There will be no fireworks or loud bangs.
Tickets: free entry, food and drinks available from the Bivouac Café
Starbeck Community Firework Night – Harrogate Railway Sports and Social Club, Friends of Starbeck School
Where: Harrogate Railway Sports & Social Club, Station View, Starbeck, HG2 7JA
When: 5pm start, 6:30pm fireworks
Tickets: under 5’s free, 5 to 15’s £1, over 16’s £2
Cancelled Harrogate Christmas Market finds new home at Crimple
The Harrogate district’s new shopping and dining venue, has agreed to host the cancelled Harrogate Christmas Market.
The Christmas Market Weekend, which will take place on November 27 and 28, will feature over 20 food and craft stalls, children’s activities, a festive animal farm, face painting, treasure trails, wreath making demos and live music.
Brian Dunsby, co-organiser of Harrogate Christmas Market, which was refused a licence on Montpellier Hill by Harrogate Borough Council this year, said:
“I’ve been working closely with Crimple and I am so pleased they have offered a home to many of the stallholders who should have been at the cancelled Harrogate Christmas Market this year.
“It’s been a tough few years for many independent traders so this is great news and in true community spirit. Crimple provides an attractive under-cover heated location for a Christmas Market, right next door to their popular garden centre and their new food hall.”
Harrogate Christmas Market was traditionally held on Montpellier Hill in November and attracted about 80,000 visitors. Since its cancellation the council has announced plans to stage Christmas markets in town and in Valley Gardens.
Read more:
- Valley Gardens Christmas market confirmed for December
- Ferris wheel, carousel and road train part of huge Harrogate Christmas offering
Crimple has undergone a £4 million refurbishment and now has one of Yorkshire’s largest food halls, 160-seat restaurant, bistro and event space, which is due to open this month, employing over 60 staff.
The food hall features more than 50 specialist producers, as well as a 12-metre-long butcher’s counter, a juice bar, bakery, patisserie, deli and cheese counter, fresh fruit and veg, milk float, food to go, in-store produced ready meals, pizzas, fresh fish, a horticulture shop, and a grain store.
Keren Shaw, operations director at Crimple, said:
“Our vision for Crimple is a place which brings people together through a dynamic shopping, dining and lifestyle experience.
“Our Christmas Market Weekend is a fantastic example of this, whether it’s supporting local suppliers, musicians or indeed being able to offer a home to the local stallholders from the much-loved Harrogate Christmas Market.”
Richard Van Opstal, owner of Harrogate-based Woodcutter Creations, said he was “saddened and frustrated” when the Harrogate Christmas Market was cancelled. He added:
“It is great news that Crimple will be working with the original Harrogate Christmas Market organisers and hosting many of us at Crimple’s Christmas Market Weekend.”
The market will take place at Crimple on Leeds Road, from 8am to 7pm on the Saturday and from 10am to 4pm on the Sunday.
Harrogate residents form group to fight £10.9m Station GatewayHarrogate town centre residents have formed a group to oppose the £10.9m Station Gateway project, which they say will increase traffic and pollution and reduce the value of their homes.
Granville Road Area Residents Association is a long established group representing about 250 homes in the streets close to Cheltenham Parade and Cheltenham Mount.
Members are now setting up a Gateway Action Group to oppose the gateway scheme. They say the consultation has been rushed and fails to take into account their views. They are also upset that a full environmental impact assessment wasn’t deemed necessary for such a major scheme.
Karl Battersby, corporate director, business and environmental services at North Yorkshire County Council, which is leading on the gateway, said it doesn’t think the project will have a significant impact on streets off Cheltenham Parade.
But residents aren’t convinced and formulated plans to act at two meetings at North Bar this week.
Jo Bagley, chair of Granville Road Area Residents Association, said the scheme would push traffic away from the largely commercial Cheltenham Parade into residential areas such as Granville Road, Back Granville Road, Mount Parade, Back Cheltenham Mount and Strawberry Dale Avenue. She said:
“The consultation questions were not relevant for people who live in the area affected. We don’t go into Harrogate — we are in Harrogate,
“A lot of us run businesses and we need to be able to get in and out and I forsee the area being gridlocked.”
Computer data
Colin Anderson, who lives on Granville Road, said his main concern was the volume of traffic that would be diverted on to the narrow Mount Parade if plans to make a section of Cheltenham Mount one way are approved.
He added:
“Traffic will be sitting here with their engines running. Those in charge of the scheme haven’t stood here watching the traffic — they use computer data.”
Resident Nick Karpik said those leading the scheme had “manipulated” numbers from the previous consultation to falsely claim the scheme had public support.
Rachel Melvin, who has lived on Granville Road for 28 years, said:
“They are not solving the problem. They are moving it to a residential area and it will increase noise and pollution.”
Ms Melvin added that even if claims traffic would only increase in each street by two cars a minute were correct, that could still amount to more than 2,000 cars per day in the area.
Read more:
- Harrogate businesses set for crunch talks on £10.9m Station Gateway
- No Harrogate district walk-in vaccine centres as clinics ‘at capacity’
- Harrogate district firm ends sponsorship with Yorkshire County Cricket Club
Residents also face the loss of four parking spaces on Cheltenham Parade, for which they have permits. They say this will make parking more difficult, and the knock-on effects of reduced parking throughout Harrogate would encourage more motorists to use the disc zone area in streets outside their homes.
Rachael Inchboard, who is a member of Harrogate Civic Society as well as a local resident, said the gateway scheme would have a profound impact on Harrogate conservation area yet most residents weren’t aware of it until they received letters from the council on October 22 giving them notice of the intention to develop. They now have just nine days until the consultation ends.
The council’s response
Karl Battersby, corporate director, business and environmental services, said:
“We don’t envisage significant impacts on the streets off Cheltenham Parade. Traffic modelling has assessed the potential impact of the proposed changes. In the worst-case scenario, which is the afternoon peak hour, we do not anticipate a significant increase in vehicles on these streets.
“The streets where the greatest increases are predicted in this hour are Bower Road, with an average increase of two or three vehicles per minute, and Cheltenham Mount, with an average increase of one or two vehicles per minute.
“We are in the middle of a public consultation in which we encourage as many people as possible to make their views known. All views will be taken into account before final decisions are made on how we will take the proposals forward.
“In addition to the online consultation – which I encourage people to complete at yourvoice.westyorks-ca.gov.uk/harrogate – project officers have seen many residents face to face at drop-ins in the Victoria shopping centre. If people have not yet given us their views, I urge them to do so before the consultation ends on 12 November.”
What is the Harrogate Station Gateway?
The Harrogate scheme is one of three projects worth a combined £42m in Harrogate, Skipton and Selby funded by the Leeds City Region Transforming Cities Fund, which encourages cycling and walking.
They are being delivered in partnership by the West Yorkshire Combined Authority, North Yorkshire County Council, Harrogate Borough Council, Craven District Council and Selby District Council.
A consultation is currently taking place on the revised designs. It is anticipated that work in Harrogate will begin by the middle of next year.
Harrogate district schools urged to consider park and stride schemesSchools are being urged to follow the example of a Knaresborough secondary school by setting up park and stride schemes.
Park and stride schemes incentivise parents to park in designated areas away from the school gates, with students walking the rest of the way.
They aim to improve road safety, reduce traffic congestion and improve air quality near school entrances.
King James’s School in Knaresborough introduced a park and stride scheme in 2019. Harrogate Borough Council issues permits to those taking part, enabling them to park for free in York Place car park at certain times.
Carl Sugden, headteacher at King James’s School, said:
“It helps further reduce congestion around our school grounds during drop-off and collection times and, as a result of the park and stride scheme, more pupils have the valuable opportunity to safely walk their last five minutes to school in the fresh air, promoting alertness in support of their learning and a healthy routine.”
North Yorkshire County Council and Harrogate Borough Council collaborate on park and stride schemes.
Read more:
- Knaresborough’s 30,000 knitted poppies honour the dead
- Parents vow to fight closure of ‘fantastic’ Woodfield primary school
North Yorkshire County Councillor Don Mackenzie, executive member for access, said:
“There are many advantages to park and stride schemes like this one at King James’s School. Keeping motor vehicles well clear of school entrances keeps pupils safe, provides a bit of useful exercise, and improves air quality.
“Our road safety and active travel team would be happy to talk to any schools keen to investigate the possibility of introducing a park and stride scheme.”
Councillor Phil Ireland, cabinet member for carbon reduction and sustainability at Harrogate Borough Council, said:
“I hope lots of people take full advantage of this incentive and support our efforts in making the district greener for future generations.”
Any schools interested in learning more about park and stride schemes can contact North Yorkshire County Council via the Open North Yorkshire website, opennorthyorkshire.co.uk, or email opennorthyorkshire@northyorks.gov.uk
One week left to register to vote for North Yorks police commissionerPeople in North Yorkshire have a week left to register to vote to elect a new North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner.
The by-election will take place on November 25 following last month’s resignation of the Conservative commissioner Philip Allott in the wake of comments he made about the murder of Sarah Everard.
The commissioner holds the county’s chief constable and chief fire officer to account.
If you are not currently on the electoral register and wish to vote, you can register here.
Turnout at the last election in May was 25%.
Applications to vote by post must be submitted by 5pm on Wednesday 10th, while proxy vote applications must be entered by 5pm on Wednesday 17th.
Janet Waggott, police area returning officer, said:
““Polling cards will be arriving shortly, and I urge all our residents to take this opportunity to have their say on who is elected to this role.
“Covid remains an important consideration and we’re putting arrangements in place to help you stay safe at the polling station; such as hand sanitiser and face masks.”
Further details about voting are here.
The full list of candidates is:
Hannah Barham-Brown, Women’s Equality Party
James Barker, Liberal Democrats
Zoë Metcalfe, Conservatives
Emma Scott-Spivey, Labour
Keith Tordoff, Independent
Read More:
- Police commissioner: Who is standing to succeed Philip Allott in North Yorkshire?
- Guide to fireworks displays in the Harrogate district
Roadworks on Harrogate’s Ripon Road delayed for third time
The completion date for the Northern Gas Networks roadworks on Ripon Road in Harrogate has been put back again.
Traffic lights were initially due to operate for four weeks from September 6 on the busy route into Harrogate town centre for what the company described as “essential work to modernise the gas network in Harrogate”.
But they were still in place when a major gas leak, which affected 3,000 homes for 48 hours, occurred on October 15.
North Yorkshire County Council has already granted roadwork extensions until October 22 and October 28.
Now Northern Gas Networks has said it expects work to continue throughout this week.
Scott Kitchingman, business operations manager at Northern Gas Networks, said:
“We had expected to remove temporary traffic lights on the Ripon Road at the end of last week, however we have encountered a delay in completing the final stages of our work and traffic management will remain in place this week.
“We know that no one likes roadworks and we would like to thank everyone for their patience while we complete this essential work.”
Northern Gas Networks said on October 17 it would carry out a “full investigation” into the gas leak but it has not released any details since, despite requests from the Stray Ferret.
Read more:
- Harrogate gas leak: cause still not revealed as roadworks continue
- Harrogate people face trip to Leeds for booster jab walk-ins
Covid poetry raises funds for Harrogate hospital
A book of poetry and photography about covid has been published to raise money for Harrogate hospital.
The book, called Focus on the GOOD, was compiled by author Leah Knight and Harrogate Hospital and Community Charity.
The charity has been collecting thoughts, anecdotes, stories and photographs from colleagues, volunteers, patients, service users and families about their experiences over the last year. They formed the basis of the book.
Contributors include staff from The White Hart Hotel, Little Dragons Day Nursery, Queen Ethelburga’s Collegiate, Ashville College, Belmont Grosvenor School, Mike Brown Art, Stacey J Evans Photography and the Cedar Court Hotel.
Author Leah Knight said:
“Focus on the GOOD is filled with poetry inspired by stories of people we can all relate to, which is one of the many reasons it will always hold a special place in my heart.
“I hope everyone enjoys reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it.”
Read more:
- Harrogate hospital staff shortages delay schools vaccine programme
- Harrogate’s Damn Yankee restaurant closes
Sammy Lambert, business development, charity and volunteer manager at Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust, said:
“The last 18 months has been filled with much sadness, but there have also been times where we can laugh and smile too.
“This book reflects on what has been gained as well as lost, where hope and positivity overcame fear, and how through challenging times a sense of community spirit has shone through.”
All proceeds from the book, which costs £12.99, will go towards the charity. It can be bought here.
Harrogate’s bodybuilding barber set for world championships
Harrogate’s bodybuilding barber David Steca is preparing to fly to Italy this weekend to take part in an over-60s world championships.
Mr Steca, 62, wrote another remarkable chapter in his story last weekend when he finished second at the IBFA British Championships in Gateshead.
The result qualified him to compete at the world championships in Rome.
Mr Steca owns male grooming salon Steca No 6 in Princes Square, Harrogate.
Besides bodybuilding, he also competes at polo.
Read more:
- Chris Bartle: the Markington man who led Team GB to Olympic gold
- Major Harrogate employer CNG ‘enters liquidation’
Harrogate ex-prison governor raises £5,000 for charity
A former prison governor from Harrogate has raised almost £5,000 for charity by giving speeches about her 35 years in the prison service.
Veronica Bird, a Harrogate resident of over 20 years, worked with some of the most notorious criminals in the country, including Moors Murderer Myra Hindley, and Charles Bronson, a man labelled ‘the most violent prisoner in the country’.
Proceeds from Ms Bird’s speaking engagements will be handed to nine local and national charities at an event on Tuesday. The event, which will be held in a garden on Cornwall Close, will be opened by Brackenfield school choir.
Ms Bird, who received an OBE for her work in the prison service, said:
“I came from a big family, a lot of poverty, and so I know what it is to be without food, without clothes.
“My school motto was ‘not for oneself, but for all’ and that is what I try to follow. Without it, I wouldn’t be where I am today.”
Read more:
- ‘It could happen to anyone’, says Harrogate woman who had stroke at 37
- Harrogate cancer survivor urges women to check their breasts
She has chosen local charities Saint Michael’s Hospice and Girlguiding’s Birk Crag Centre. Cheques will also go to Jacqui’s Million, Barnsley Hospice, St Leonard’s Hospice, and Mind, alongside the MS Society UK, Royal British Legion, and the NSPCC.
The event begins at noon, at 100 Cornwall Close, Harrogate, on Tuesday 2nd November.
Chris Bartle: the Markington man who led Team GB to Olympic goldThink of an England sports coach living in the Harrogate district who enjoyed a remarkable summer, and chances are Gareth Southgate comes to mind.
But there is another option — and this one didn’t have to settle for second best.
Chris Bartle was high performance coach of the Great Britain equestrian team that won its first Olympic team gold medal for 49 years in Tokyo.
Despite living just a dozen miles apart, the two men have never crossed paths. Chris says:
“I’d love to meet him. Some of the things he’s quoted as saying are similar to my mantra. We seem to have very similar philosophies.”
Like Gareth, Chris is regarded as one of sport’s nice guys. But unlike the Swinsty man, whose life is consumed by England duties, Chris spends most of his time in the Harrogate district at the Yorkshire Riding Centre in Markington, which he runs with his wife and sister.
He says he spends about two-thirds of his life at Markington and one third on GB coaching duties.
When he’s at Markington, he still teaches everyone from talented juniors to Olympic stars at Markington.
Olympic riders in Markington
Chris’ Belgian mother opened the riding centre at Markington in 1963, 11 years after his parents moved to the village, which is between Ripon and Harrogate.
The family still lives on site and Chris takes a hands-on approach, teaching everyone from talented juniors to Olympic stars and generally mucking. When we visited he’d just been on a cherry picker helping mend a roof — something we doubt Gareth does at Wembley.
With its four training arenas, livery, cross-country fields and on-site accommodation, the centre caters for riders of all standards.
Everyone from bygone stars like Harvey Smith and the Whitakers to current Olympic riders from Sweden, Brazil and Germany have trained at Markington. Chris says:
“I look at the print out of riders at the Olympics and it’s amazing how many have connections with the Yorkshire Riding Centre.”
The centre also has an elegant wedding venue, built by the Wilberforce family of anti-slavery fame. The Wilberforces still own nearby Markington Hall.
Read more:
- Firefighters rescue sheep from swollen River Ure in Ripon
- Markington shopkeeper overwhelmed by villagers’ birthday surprises
Chris studied economics at Bristol University and jokes he has spent his entire life with horses to avoid a proper job.
He started as a jockey but was too tall so he switched to eventing and then dressage, at which he finished sixth at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. He has been to all nine Olympics since.
His coaching CV is phenomenal. He was national coach to the German Olympic three-day event team that won team gold at the Beijing and London Olympics in 2008 and 2012. The Germans also won gold at Athens in 2004 but were stripped of their medals when a horse failed a doping test.
Olympic glory
Chris, who had trained the British eventing team at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics, was appointed GB high performance coach in 2016 in the hope of emulating Germany’s success.
He masterminded the team’s preparation for Tokyo, which included staying outside the athletes’ village to minimise the covid risk. He says it was like staying in a five-star prison, and despite their caution there was a constant fear of covid jeopardising everything.
The British team gave an utterly dominant performance to take team gold for the first time since 1972. But his abiding memory is rather sad.
“It was the athletes on the podium wearing masks and you can’t see them grinning and how happy they are.”
Chris says he is equally proud of the gold medals he helped Germany win, but adds:
“Team GB was different to doing it with another nation. For that reason and how long it had taken for GB to get gold, that’s a standout moment. It was a super highlight.”
Britain’s Tom McEwen also won individual silver in the eventing but, like any coach, Chris wasn’t totally happy.
“It could have gone better. I felt there was another medal to be had in the individual eventing. I slightly blame myself for that because Laura Collett slightly over-egged it in preparation. She tried to get better and better and in that heat and humidity the horse didn’t sparkle in the dressage phase as much as it usually does.”
California dreaming
Chris is 69 now but looks remarkably fit and isn’t planning to put himself out to grass anytime soon. He hopes to continue in his current GB role until 2028 when the Olympics will return to Los Angeles, 44 years after he competed there. It would cap one of the longest and most remarkable careers in sport. He says:
“Los Angeles is an attainable goal and it would complete the circle.”
His 14-year-old daughter Poppy, a very talented rider, will be 21 then, which must be at the back of his mind but he’s careful not to put any pressure on her.
Whatever happens in his career, Markington will remain home.
“We are very fortunate where we are. The whole of this area is just an amazing place to live — although some of my colleagues tend to think this is the frozen north!”