The owners of Husk Beer Emporium in Harrogate hope to open a bar this summer that showcases the best craft beers from the UK and abroad.
Danny Duckworth and Tom Gill, both 33, opened the shop on King’s Road just before the first covid lockdown. It sells a wide array of craft beers with idiosyncratic branding and flavours.
They said the next step is opening their own bar and they recently submitted plans to Harrogate Borough Council to do this.
The bar would be in a unit that was previously home to Greek restaurant Souvlaki on Station Square, opposite the Queen Victoria monument.
If all goes to plan, they said the venture could open by May. It will offer live music, meet the brewery nights, food, outdoor seating and an ‘Aladdin’s cave’ of unique beers.

The bar would open in this empty unit on Station Square
‘Weird and wonderful’ beers
The friends met as students at St Aidan’s Church of England High School and are excited by the prospect of moving into a more prominent location in the town.
Mr Duckworth believes craft beer can offer a more immersive experience for drinkers than traditional real ale, due to its taste combinations and flavours.
He said variety was the key to what they offer.
“We pride ourselves on weird and wonderful beers”
As well as selling more traditionally brewed craft beers, Husk also has a well-stocked range of alcohol-free and gluten-free options.
Mr Duckworth said:
“People come here on a Friday and buy eight bottles of beer and they will all taste different.”

Inside Husk Beer Emporium
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Craft beer trail
Craft beer muscled its way onto the drinking scene several years ago and the trend has proved that it has staying power.
Harrogate was once not known for alternative, DIY-style bars, but Mr Duckworth said Major Tom’s Social opened the door for places like the Disappearing Chin, North Bar and themselves.
Mr Gill said he hopes Husk bar can be part of a Harrogate craft beer trail, boosted by the Station Gateway scheme that would see the outside area at the end of James Street pedestrianised to allow for al-fresco summer drinking.
He said:
“More and more people are seeking places like this out.”
Mr Duckworth added:
New woodland with 2,000 trees planted in Bilton“The craft beer scene in Harrogate is buzzing for us to open, we hope they can support us.”
Over 2,000 trees have been planted on the edge of Nidd Gorge to form a new woodland for people to enjoy.
Bilton Conservation Group was helped by employees from Belzona Polymerics as well as members of Knox Valley Residents’ Association and the Scout movement to plant the trees at Bilton Fields during February.
Sixteen native broadleaf species were planted, including a specimen of the rare wild service tree.
The woodland is sponsored and paid for by the Society of the Holy Child Jesus, a Catholic congregation of women that was founded in 1846.

Scout volunteers planting a tree
Four nuns, representing the order, came from Oxford and France to help on the second day.
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Bilton Conservation Group has planted over 20,000 trees in Bilton Fields since 1985.
Keith Wilkinson, of Bilton Conservation Group, said:
Councillors approve ‘much-needed’ Harrogate pet crematorium“We had hoped to plant them last year but the weather and covid got in the way.
“Fringed with blossom species such as wild cherry, crab apple, dog rose, hawthorn, blackthorn and rowan it will be magnificent in years to come, providing food and shelter for birds, butterflies and bees. It will look fantastic.”
Harrogate Borough Council‘s planning committee has unanimously backed plans to build the district’s first pet crematorium.
The crematorium will be built inside a converted shipping container at Stonefall Cemetery on Wetherby Road, Harrogate.
There will also be a ‘goodbye room’ in a converted garage where owners can say final farewells to their pets.
The council, which approved its own plans for the crematorium yesterday, currently charges £36 to collect dead pets from people’s homes. The closest pet crematoriums are in Leeds, Thirsk and Skipton.
John Club, the council’s commercial and community development manager, told the meeting there are around 47,000 pets in the Harrogate district and that owners increasingly want to give them a dignified send-off after they die.
The move follows the lead of councils in north east Lincolnshire and Barnsley, which have already opened or started work on pet crematoriums.

This storage building will be converted into a ‘goodbye room’.
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Stephen Hemsworth, bereavement services manager at the council, took questions from councillors about the project.
Mr Hemsworth said it would cost around £50 for a rabbit to be cremated whereas a dog would cost over £200. He said revenue would be invested back into the council.
He added the facility would be used by the general public as well as local vets.
Good news for pet owners
Conservative councillor for Washburn ward, Victoria Oldham, who is also a farmer, said she fully supported the proposals.
She said:
Residents say new Granby Farm homes will ‘tower over’ them“It’s much needed in the area. I’m jolly glad that it’s coming forward now. I am sure it will be well used. Having a goodbye room will mean an awful lot to pet owners.”
Residents who live adjacent to the 95-home Granby Farm development have complained to Harrogate Borough Council about the height of some of the new properties being built, saying they will “tower over them”.
The council investigated the complaint and found Redrow Homes breached planning rules at the development by starting to build 15 houses before receiving the correct planning approval.
Outline planning permission for the development was granted in April 2021. It will be called Granby Meadows and will have a mixture of 95 one, two, three and four-bedroom properties.
In recent months, contractors have started preparing the land, laying roads, and building some of the houses.
The homes are being built on a field that is prone to flooding and the council said some of the homes are being built between 0.5m and 1.35m above existing ground level to help with drainage. However, the increase in the ground elevation had not been approved at the planning stage.
Residents concerns
Granby Residents Association, which includes people living in properties adjacent to the development, complained to the council that the homes were being built too high and would “tower over” nearby homes.
Gary Walker, a member of the group, said:
“Residents along the site boundary with both Roseville Drive and Kingsley Drive expressed grave concerns once the work on the infrastructure commenced.
“You only have to visit the properties on Kingsley Drive to see how high the levels have been increased and how these new houses will tower over them.”

Work underway at the site.
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Mr Walker shared with the Stray Ferret email correspondence he had with the council’s planning enforcement officer Andrew Lancashire.
Mr Lancashire confirmed that work on 15 homes took place before the planning condition had been discharged.
He wrote:
“It would appear that the foundations for the units 80-94 have been laid and ground levels will be raised between 0.5m to 1.35m above the existing ground levels to the internal finished floor level (FFL) of the new dwellings.
“The engineering operation to increase the FFL were not approved at the planning stage and development has begun without these planning conditions first being discharged. This is a breach of planning.”
Action
Mr Lancashire said the council investigated the planning breach further to decide what action to take.
As the homes would be up to 1.35m taller, he measured what the distance was between them and Kingsley Drive.
He found all met the recommended distance except for two properties.
Mr Lancashire said the difference was “relatively minor” and requested that trees be planted as mitigation.
He wrote that Redrow Homes have “recognised this shortfall and are in the process of submitting a revised and enhanced landscape buffer to deal with this situation”.
David Faraday, technical director for Redrow (Yorkshire), said:
Harrogate council HQ ‘like the Mary Celeste’, says councillor“We are developing this site in accordance with the approved plans. Prior to the planning permission being granted we had supplied all relevant and requested information to the council regarding site levels.
“We are currently liaising with officers at the council regarding an issue identified with the site levels and we have committed to provide additional landscaping along the boundary. This will be maintained long-term, initially by our site team and on an ongoing basis by a management company for the site, once they have been appointed.
“Site drainage proposals remain consistent with the strategy agreed during the planning process and Yorkshire Water have confirmed their intention to adopt the scheme as proposed.”
A councillor has compared Harrogate Borough Council‘s headquarters at Knapping Mount to the abandoned ghost ship the Mary Celeste, due to the number of staff still working from home.
The multi-million-pound Civic Centre opened in 2017 and can accommodate up to 500 council workers. However, the council is still encouraging many staff to work from home despite lockdown restrictions being removed.
Nick Brown, the Conservative councillor for Bishop Monkton and Newby, told the Stray Ferret yesterday that he was unsatisfied with the response of Conservative council leader Richard Cooper to a question he asked at a council meeting last week.
Cllr Cooper said decisions about working practices should be made by senior officers rather than councillors.
Cllr Brown told the Stray Ferret:
“We councillors agreed to spend £13m on a new Civic Centre, opened in 2017, for officers to work in. Yet the leader now tells us that it is not members’ business to require council officers to work there.
“Prior to the covid pandemic, the Civic Centre was a busy place where I as a councillor could find the officers that I wished to speak to. Now it is like the Mary Celeste!”.
Cllr Brown believes ending the work from home policy would “benefit the local economy”.
He added:
“Our Conservative Prime Minister has given a clear message to end working from home in the public sector, in order to boost the economy.
“As a Conservative-led council, I believe we should get officers back at their desks and using the Civic Centre.”
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The public sector workers union Unison said it “broadly supports” the council’s decision to allow staff to work from home.
David Houlgate, branch secretary for the Harrogate district, told the Stray Ferret council staff proved during the pandemic they can work from home effectively.
He added:
“We believe the government’s Living with Covid strategy to scrap all remaining covid rules in England was reckless.
“So we broadly support this cautious approach taken by Harrogate Borough Council about returning to the Civic Centre at this time.
“Staff have demonstrated over a two-year period that they can deliver vital public services whether or not they are in the office or working from home.
“We’re confident that that can continue, though poor pay does present an ever increasing risk.”
‘Agile working’
The Stray Ferret has asked the council for the number of staff currently working from home who would normally be in the Civic Centre.
A council spokesperson said:
“Following the updated guidance in relation to the end of Plan B measures, staff are permitted to work from the office should they wish to or are required to do so.
“The number of staff using said office(s) differs day-by-day so it would be difficult to provide a comprehensive figure. Staff also come and go from the office depending on their job role; housing and planning officers for example.
“And while covid has seen a significant increase in staff working from home – and rightly so – many staff were already doing so. The civic centre was designed in such a way that staff could hybrid work or ‘hot desk’ if they so wished.
“Agile working is something adopted by many local authorities and companies long before covid and is one of the many benefits of working for Harrogate Borough Council.”
Coming soon! New pothole machine to improve Harrogate district roads
North Yorkshire County Council has said it will use two new state-of-the-art machines to blitz potholes across the county this month.
The machines are able to fix the potholes through a technique called spray injection patching.
With this method, the machines clean and dry the holes then fill them with a cold bitumen compound to seal cracks. Finally, an aggregate is used to fill the hole.
The county council said in a press release yesterday that acquiring the machines would enable it to undertake “an extended programme of pothole repairs across many North Yorkshire neighbourhoods during March”.
It added “local communities will be informed of locations and anticipated dates for the work very shortly”.
The council was encouraged by a recent trial of the machines and believes they are a cheaper and quicker way to fill in potholes. It also said repairs can last longer.
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Conservative councillor Don Mackenzie, executive member for highways, said:
Business park near Flaxby that could support 2,000 jobs approved“The trials carried out were very successful and this is a great opportunity to repair more roads.
“This is good news for residents of North Yorkshire, spray injection patching is a much quicker process of repairing potholes and the repairs tend to last a lot longer.
“It offers a cost-effective way of repairing potholes whilst reducing the inconvenience to the travelling public. We have also secured the services of this specialist equipment later in the year.”
Ilkley-based property developer Opus North and Bridges Fund Management have been granted planning permission from Harrogate Borough Council to build a 600,000 square feet business park near Flaxby.
The business park will be called ‘Harrogate 47’ as it will be built close to junction 47 of the A1 (M). The developer believes it could support 2,000 jobs.
It’s allocated as the main strategic employment site in the council’s Harrogate district Local Plan and already has existing planning permission for more than half a million square feet of employment space.
The new plans include up to 130,000 sq ft of office accommodation, about 75,000 sq ft of tech starter units and approximately 430,000 sq ft for logistics and warehouses.
Ryan Unsworth, development director of Opus North, said:
“This development is key for the Harrogate and wider North Yorkshire economy due to its capacity to transform vacant land into office and industrial space for local, regional and national occupiers, and the vast job-creating potential it has.
“The delivery of Harrogate 47 will allow local companies to expand and grow within the region in addition to attracting inward investment into the district and we are delighted that its potential has been recognised through the positive planning outcome.”
Electric vehicle show comes to Harrogate
A global event that promotes clean energy and electric vehicles will come to Harrogate’s Yorkshire Event Centre in May 2023.
The event is called Fully Charged, the World’s no.1 Electric Vehicle and Clean Energy Show, and is expected to attract 10,000 visitors from May 19 to May 21.
The event will be hosted by Red Dwarf actor and YouTuber Robert Llewellyn.
There will be 120 exhibitors and visitors will be able to test drive some of the latest electric vehicles on sale in the UK.
Dan Caesar, joint chief executive of Fully Charged Live, said:
“Fully Charged Live has been a huge global success, and we are delighted to be bringing the show to the north of England at last. Harrogate is a great location, and the Yorkshire Event Centre, with its indoor and outdoor space, and its sustainability credentials, is a natural partner.”

(L to R) presenter Robert Llewellyn, Richard Moorhouse operations manager at the YEC, Dan Caesar, joint CEO of Fully Charged Live and Ben Chatburn sales manager at the YEC.
Grants of up to £100,000 available for Yorkshire social enterprises
The Social Enterprise Support Fund is now open for the second round of funding and will provide grants of between £10,000 and £100,000 for social enterprises that have been impacted by covid.
This follows the first round of applications in December that saw over 800 applications from enterprises across England, requesting grants worth over £37m.
The fund is available to social enterprises if most of their beneficiaries are in England, and their annual income has been between £20,000 and £1.8m in either of the last two financial years.
Sheffield-based Key Fund supports social enterprises across Yorkshire. Its chief executive, Matt Smith, said:
“The UK’s social enterprises have been at the heart of community survival and recovery during the pandemic. In a post-covid world, where the inequalities within society are even starker, the work of these organisations will be needed more than ever.
“This grant funding has already proven to be a lifeline to many social enterprises and the communities they work in, and so we welcome this second round of financial support.”

Matt Smith, CEO of Key Fund
Knaresborough artist Shirley Vine presented her lockdown portraits to key workers on Saturday.
Ms Vine started the project to pay tribute to people on the frontline during the darkest periods of the pandemic.
Her 15 subjects included a fireman, a care worker, nurses, teachers, a police officer, refuse collector, dentist, signalman, and foodbank volunteers.
The acrylic paintings have been on display in the Chain Lane vaccination centre in Knaresborough but have now been presented free of charge to the subjects at a reception Ms Vine organised on Saturday at COGS (Centre On Gracious Street).
Ms Vine said:
“Lockdown was fine at first, as it was the time when I usually finish my watercolour classes for the year and spend time sorting the house and garden.
“That was OK for a few weeks, but I soon realised that something more was going to be needed for the future unknown time of covid.
“Tom Croft, a professional portraitist appeared on BBC TV to galvanise any artists to paint their NHS heroes. I took to this and painted 15 local frontline key workers”.
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Receiving the portraits brought back often difficult memories to the key workers who Ms Vine painted.
Deborah and Ian, from anti-food waste community group Resurrected Bites said,
“It has been a privilege and so good to be able to help when so many were desperate”.

Deborah and Ian with their portrait.
Gee, a care worker, said,
“As the residents couldn’t have visitors, we became their family, which was so important”.

Gee and her portrait.
Lesley, a dentist, said,
“Stunning Portraits. A poignant reminder of what we were doing and now feels like a lifetime ago”.

Lesley with her portrait.
Sam from Noah’s Ark Pre-school said:
“It was hard work but rewarding, cocooned within Noah’s Ark. Shirley has captured how children’s learning continued throughout and how parents valued the setting and all of the staff.”

Sam and her portrait.
A multi-million pound project to upgrade junction 47 on the A1(M) at Flaxby will be completed by the end of this month.
Work began at the start of September 2020 to widen slip roads and install traffic lights to prevent vehicles queueing.
The project, carried out by contractors Farrans Construction on behalf of North Yorkshire County Council, also involves upgrading the road network just off the junction.
Work was originally due to be completed in September 2021 but has encountered several delays. The council blamed ‘unforeseen ground conditions’ and the discovery of great crested newts for setting the project back.
Final repair works on the A168 bridge and verges along with resurfacing of the A59 will run from March 14 to 26 under overnight weekday closures.
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Once the traffic signals are installed there will be a period where the signal timings are adjusted by engineers to the optimum settings for traffic flow conditions. This may result in some extra delays during March and April.
Conservative councillor Andy Paraskos, member for the Ainsty division, added:
“The upcoming works will involve repairs, resurfacing as well as the installation of road markings and traffic loops. For the safety of our workforce this must be carried out under a full road closure and we apologise in advance for any inconvenience this essential work may cause.
Conservative county councillor Don Mackenzie, executive member for access, said:
“The finish line is in sight for this important scheme which will support the future growth of the Harrogate and Knaresborough areas.
“The scheme promises to reduce congestion and improve road safety at this major junction. It is a great example of how we are delivering on our aim to improve east-west connections across North Yorkshire.”
Rising costs
The council initially earmarked £7.7m for the project, but it said last year it now expected it to cost over £10m.
The project is being funded by the council, with £2.47m from the government’s Local Growth Fund along with contributions from Highways England and developer Forward Investment LLP.
The Stray Ferret has asked the council for the current cost of the project but did not receive a response by the time of publication.
Harrogate council still expecting staff to work from homeHarrogate Borough Council says it expects some staff to continue working from home, despite all covid restrictions now being lifted.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced an immediate end to working from home guidance on January 19.
The following week, the government dropped Plan B restrictions, including mandatory face masks and vaccine passports.
At a full meeting of councillors last week, Conservative member for Bishop Monkton and Newby, Nick Brown, questioned Conservative council leader Richard Cooper about the working from home directive.
The Civic Centre on St Luke’s Avenue off King’s Road cost the council £17m and opened in December 2017.
Cllr Brown said:
“This council spent many millions on the Civic Centre, which has stood almost empty for two years, Given recent directives by the Prime Minister, when can we expect all the council officers usually based at the Civic Centre to be back at their desks?”.
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In response, Cllr Cooper said some staff worked from home before covid hit and will continue to do so.
But he said any decisions about working practices would be made by senior officers and not councillors.
Cllr Cooper said:
“Staff will work from the Civic Centre and other venues when their line managers require them to do so, or when they need to be there for a specific reason, as they did before covid.
“If we think our job as councillors is to dictate who and where people can work, we are mistaken. That’s an operational decision for the chief executive and line managers.”
‘Agile working’
The Stray Ferret has asked the council for the number of staff currently working from home who would normally be in the Civic Centre.
A council spokesperson said:
“Following the updated guidance in relation to the end of Plan B measures, staff are permitted to work from the office should they wish to or are required to do so.
“The number of staff using said office(s) differs day-by-day so it would be difficult to provide a comprehensive figure. Staff also come and go from the office depending on their job role; housing and planning officers for example.
“And while covid has seen a significant increase in staff working from home – and rightly so – many staff were already doing so. The civic centre was designed in such a way that staff could hybrid work or ‘hot desk’ if they so wished.
“Agile working is something adopted by many local authorities and companies long before covid and is one of the many benefits of working for Harrogate Borough Council.”