Harrogate’s Isaac Smith is hoping for a career as a professional touring car racer after a successful season so far.
Mr Smith, 20, finished second in the latest round of the Touring Car Championship UK at Brands Hatch in Kent last weekend, hitting speeds of up to 135mph.
He’s currently second overall in the championship after three of seven meetings. He’s also leading the Tom Walker Trophy for newcomers.
Touring car racing features heavily modified road cars. It is considered much fairer than Formula One because the engine capabilities of the cars taking part are far more even, making it more of a test of driving skill.
Encouraged by his petrolhead father Mike, Mr Smith, from Blubberhouses, started racing go-karts at the age of 10.
He moved to senior racing when he was 17 and hopes to become a full-time professional.

Isaac Smith
He aims to race on the European circuit and then compete in the World Touring Car Championships.
Asked what he enjoys about the sport, he said:
“There’s nothing else that gives me a kick like racing. It’s always a battle out there.”
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- Harrogate’s Rachel Daly ready for emotional Elland Road fixture
Yorkshire School of Garden Design set to launch at Harewood House
A top North Yorkshire garden designer is launching a new school at Harewood House which will focus on northern landscapes.
Alistair Baldwin decided to set up the Yorkshire School of Garden Design after realising there were no similar schools in the north.
Opening its doors in August, the facility will offer a range of short courses throughout the year.
These will be aimed at garden design enthusiasts and those wanting to learn more about all aspects of the art, from landscaping to planting.
The school’s flagship professional Diploma in Garden Design, which will be delivered over an academic year, begins in September.
Mr Baldwin said:
“For too long the budding designers of the north have had little local choice when looking for a learning experience to broaden their skills and launch them into the profession.
“More often than not, students have had to make the journey to London to find the right course and I thought that needed to change.
“I have lived and worked in North Yorkshire for over three decades and have developed an acute understanding of how the terrain, geology, even climate and the way of working is very different in this part of the UK.
“The process within which gardens are designed and built in this magnificent landscape is very different to the south. So I want to share everything I have learned over the last 35 years and inspire a new generation.”

Alistair Baldwin. Photo: Eva Nemeth
The school will be based at Harewood House, which has more than 100 acres of parkland designed by eminent 18th century landscape architect Sir Lancelot Capability Brown.
Trevor Nicholson, head gardener at Harewood House, said:
“We are absolutely delighted that the Yorkshire School of Garden design will have its base at Harewood House, which we think is a fitting and inspirational venue for a school, which hopes to train the design professionals of the future.
“I am incredibly excited to welcome guests and inspire them with Harewood’s beautiful landscapes.”
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- Stray Gardener: Top tips for successful propagation
- Sensory garden for visually impaired to open in Harrogate
Mr Baldwin trained in garden design in Leeds. After graduating, he built an award-winning landscape design practice in Richmond, which delivers high-spec public and private gardens throughout the UK, as well as internationally.
Having spent 12 years teaching landscape and garden design at Leeds Beckett University, while also running his practice, he has a wealth of experience in nurturing the next generation of garden design talent.
Mr Baldwin added:
“I am delighted to announce that I will be joined by an eminent team of world class design consultants, who will work with me to deliver the courses.
“Having a team of practising garden designers, all of whom have experience in creating rich and well-crafted gardens, means that students will get essential practical advice and insight straight from the horse’s mouth.”

The Terrace at Harewood House. Photo: Harewood House Trust and Lee Beal
North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner Zoe Metcalfe has rejected claims that proposed changes to Harrogate’s night time fire service will increase the risk to lives.
Ms Metcalfe is consulting on a three-year plan for fire services in the county in the face of severe financial pressure.
One of the proposals is to reduce the number of fire engines operating overnight at Harrogate and Scarborough fire stations from two to one.
This has been criticised by firefighters and trade unions, who fear it could cost lives.
But in her first interview with the Stray Ferret since she was elected commissioner in November, Ms Metcalfe said she disagreed with this assessment:
“From everything I’ve seen I’m confident that won’t happen. This is a genuine consultation. I would really urge everyone to engage with it.”
Ms Metcalfe’s Risk and Resource Model 2022 to 2025 Consultation, published in May, sets out how the fire service will deploy its resources over the next three years. It puts the emphasis on fire prevention, especially during the day when most fires occur.

Firefighters tackling a recent blaze in West Tanfield.
Harrogate and Scarborough currently both have an emergency fire engine and a tactical response fire engine operating 24 hours a day.
The model proposes both stations have two emergency response vehicles during the day but only one at night. They would lose their tactical response engines altogether.
Ms Metcalfe was accompanied at the interview by Dave Winspear, who is part of the senior management team at North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service.
Mr Winspear, who is based in Ripon, said the changes would enhance the current fire service model across the county, adding:
“During the times when we know we are busiest we are providing additional resource into those two towns by bringing in a different type of fire engine.
“It improves the ability to respond to a wide range of incidents.
“We are looking to remove a fire engine in the evening when we are quiet but based on the fact that we have robust arrangements in around the Harrogate and Scarborough area from other fire stations that can respond into that area.”
He added the tactical response engine, which will be lost, had “limited response capability” compared to emergency fire engines.

Harrogate fire station
Harrogate currently employs 40 firefighters across four watches and five could be affected by the changes. Mr Winspear said they would be offered the chance to be redeployed.
Government cuts £8m a year
The new model for fire services is being drawn up against a bleak financial backdrop.
The government recently axed North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service’s capital grant, worth about £8m a year.
It means the service could have to borrow up to £31 million over the next five years. Steve Howley, Fire Brigades Union North Yorkshire brigade secretary, has said the service would be left struggling to buy basics.
Ms Metcalfe described the decision to cut the capital grant as “very unfair” at the time it was announced and this week told us she was “working hard for additional funding” to ensure the service didn’t end up in the position outlined by the union.

Zoe Metcalfe
Delays answering 101 and 999 calls
Ms Metcalfe, who was born in Ripon, went to school in Harrogate and now lives in Aldborough, also said she was working to reduce delays in answering 101 and 999 calls in the police control room.
Home Office figures last month showed that North Yorkshire police took on average 30 seconds to answer 999 calls — the third worst performance in the country. The calls should be answered within 10 seconds.
“Over the last couple of years there has been a huge increase in the volume of calls, especially 999 and they come first.”
The commissioner’s office has pledged £140,000 to address the issue. When will people noticed a difference?
The force control room should currently employ 146 full-time equivalent employees across communications and dispatch when it is fully staffed.
Read more:
- Fire Brigades Union ‘seriously concerned’ over cuts to Harrogate service
- Harrogate firefighter brands plans to rely on one fire engine ‘farcical’
There are currently 141. With the commissioner’s additional investment, there will be a revised target of 161.
Ms Metcalfe said a third of calls to police involved mental health issues and it was important to understand the data better and work with other organisations to tackle the issues.
She said her background as a Conservative councillor on Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council meant she was familiar with many of the agencies involved in mental health.
Asked whether she, as a senior Conservative politician, shared Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones’ lack of confidence in Prime Minister Boris Johnson, she said:
“I will leave that to MPs in the parliamentary party.”
You can find out more about the proposed changes and take part in the consultation here.
Strayside Sunday: we have zombie leadership locally and nationallyStrayside Sunday is a monthly political opinion column. It is written by Paul Baverstock, former Director of Communications for the Conservative Party.
I write the morning after the night before the Wakefield and Tiverton by-elections, both of which proved (predictably) disastrous for Boris Johnson and the Conservative Party. In Wakefield, Labour took the seat with a majority of 4,925 on a 12.7% swing. In Tiverton, Tory since 1880, a massive swing of almost 30% saw the Sir Ed Davey’s Liberal Democrats win with a majority of 6,144. Conservative Party Co-Chair Oliver Dowden published a letter before 6am this morning, “taking responsibility” and falling on his sword. Whether this is a put-up job, designed to draw the eye away from Boris Johnson’s actual responsibility, with a seat in the Lords to follow – after an appropriate passage of time – remains to be seen. However, Dowden’s reputation is that of a decent fellow and, so rare in modern politics, let’s take it at face value that, as the man in charge of the by-election campaigns that led to crushing defeat, he has decided to do the decent thing and go.
It was Bill Clinton’s Louisianan campaign guru James Carville who, in 1992, coined the phrase “it’s the economy, stupid.” And, in the end, it always is. If the economy is in the tank, then it is almost impossible for governing parties to win elections, general, by or local. And our economy is in serious trouble. With inflation running at a 40 year high 10%, the cost-of-living soaring, with post-Brexit trade friction and severe global supply chain problems, the economic outlook is bleak and a recession looking and feeling increasingly likely. At least interest rates, although on the up, are still in the low single digits. With the price of petrol and diesel going through the roof – the Stray Ferret reported that diesel hit £2 per litre in Harrogate this week – with energy prices spiking and with the costs of the average food basket increasing by close to 50%, people are finding it increasingly difficult to make ends meet. As part of an economy drive, I would recommend that you avoid filling up at Wetherby services, which now boasts the most expensive fuel in the country.
If you ask pollsters there is only one question that counts in public opinion polling; “is the country heading in the right direction.” The single largest determinant of the answer is the state of the economy and, as the Americans say, how that is hitting people in their pocketbook. Unambiguously, most people are worse off now than they were a year ago and you are never going to win elections in that context.
That said you can’t discount the facts of the resignations of the former Conservative MP’s in Wakefield and Tiverton – criminal sexual assault and watching porn (twice) in the commons. These combined with the litany of bad behaviour on behalf of the Prime Minister – ethics violations prior, during and including Partygate – take one’s mind back to the allegations of Tory sleaze that put paid to the last long-standing Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher and John Major. This lot aren’t behaving properly just when we need maximum grab in Westminster.
Boris Johnson carries on, blithely disregarding that which practically everyone else in the country knows; he has lost any authority to govern in our names. Yet on Boris blunders and blusters, now seemingly safe for a year’s grace, post-confidence vote, per Tory party rules. If the attacks on him from within his party had been coordinated, rather than piecemeal, then the confidence vote against him would not have been forced until the by-election results were in. But because the parliamentary party itself is a loose coalition of Red Wallers, Shire Tories, Right Wingers and One Nation Moderates, there was little shared enterprise in the bid to remove Johnson, rather a collection of individual malcontents from across the piece. Nor is there an obvious successor from any wing. I hope it’s not true, but because the plotters couldn’t get their act together, we may now be stuck with Johnson until 2023.
Closer to home we are stuck with Harrogate Borough Council for another 9 months until it is abolished and the North Yorkshire County Council unitary takes over. Following the May local elections, a new executive team took over at NYCC, which has prompted a rethink about the controversial proposed Station Gateway Development here in Harrogate. In two previous public consultations significant concerns have been raised by residents and business leaders about the impact of the development on traffic in the town. Yet another consultation – specifically on traffic impacts – is now to be commissioned. This is the politics of delay, of kicking the can down the road. Whether or not Station Gateway ever does get the go-ahead is now an even money chance, linked so closely as it is with the now dead in the water Harrogate Borough Council.
It seems whether in Westminster, or at home in Harrogate, we face a period of zombie government, neither dead nor alive, ill-equipped to deal with the very serious issues confronting us all.
That’s my Strayside Sunday.
Read More:
The Stray Ferret pays tribute to Harry Gration
Harry Gration was loved by many people in the Harrogate district and across Yorkshire. He touched many lives – last year he worked with us at the Stray Ferret in a competition to find Harry’s Heroes.
In the course of a few weeks he met the finalists and made podcasts with them – talking to them about what inspired them to work for others. It was what Harry liked doing best — meeting people from all walks of life.
Tamsin O’Brien the director of the Stray Ferret worked with Harry at the BBC when he was presenting Look North. Today she said:
“Harry was a one-off. He was fun and simply got on with everyone. A naturally gifted communicator.
“I worked with Harry in my previous career at the BBC and it was joy to work again with him last year on Harry’s Heroes. It’s hard to take in the news that he’s no longer with us.
“I speak on behalf of all of us at the Stray Ferret by sending Helen and his family all our love and thoughts at this time. There was only one Harry Gration.”
Susie Little from Covid Co-operation Harrogate, who was one of the nominated heroes, posted a picture on Facebook of herself with Harry and this message :
“I am so sad following the news of Harry Gration’s death last night. He was a true Yorkshire gent; no airs or graces, not a hint of “celeb”.“I was privileged to spend an hour with him last year when nominated for a Harry’s Hero award. My thoughts are with his family, friends, and BBC colleagues who must be reeling at the news. He was only 72. Rest in peace, Harry. Legend.”

Susie Little with Harry last year for Harry’s Heroes
Harry Gration lived in York but was a regular visitor to the district.
He was a season ticket holder at Harrogate Town which posted this message:
We are deeply saddened to hear of the passing of friend of the club, Harry Gration. The thoughts of everyone at the club are with Harry’s loved ones at this time
Recently Harry spoke at a Harrogate Brigantes fundraising event. Today a statement was issued from the club’s Les Ellington:
“We are shocked and saddened to hear of the passing of Harry Gration MBE, who was guest speaker and auctioneer at our charity dinner only on 17 June, helping us to raise over £5000 for our Ukraine appeal.
Our thoughts are with his family, friends and former colleagues at the BBC. Rest in peace Harry and thank you from all of us.”
Do you have memories of meeting Harry Gration? Do send them to us and we will publish them in the coming few days. contact@thestrayferret.co.uk
Oz Clarke and the Armonico Consort toast music with ‘Gin & Phonic’A top wine critic and broadcaster is set to team up with a choir and instrumental ensemble to explore the relationship between music and gin.
Held in association with Harrogate’s Slingsby Gin, the event will see Oz Clarke and the Armonico Consort investigate the highs and lows of the connection between gin, music, and humans over the centuries.
Gin and Phonic will take place in The Spiegeltent, in Crescent Gardens, Harrogate, on the evening of Monday, July 4, as part of the Harrogate Music Festival.
Slingsby Gin will be providing two free gin tastings for each audience member, which can be sipped whilst listening to the music of Purcell, Handel and Dowland.
Whilst William Slingsby discovered the unique properties of the natural spring water from Harrogate’s Tewit Well in 1571, more than 40 years later Slingsby Gin captured the ‘Spirit of Harrogate’, synonymous with its beautiful and restorative nature, in a variety of different gins.
Tickets cost £28 and are available here or by calling the Harrogate International Festivals box office on 01423 562303.
Read more:
Man, 40, charged with attempted murder in Beckwithshaw
A 40-year-old man has been charged with two counts of attempted murder in Beckwithshaw.
The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is also charged with assaulting an emergency worker.
It follows an incident at a house on the main B6161 Otley Road, very close to the local primary school, at about 8.20am on Monday.
North Yorkshire Police said in a statement today:
“We are continuing to appeal to anyone who may have been dropping off children at the school, or commuters passing by, to check their vehicle dashcam and report any footage that may have captured any part of the incident prior to the attendance of the emergency services.”
Anyone with information can contact the police on 101, press 2 and ask to speak to the major investigation team.
Quote reference number 12220105995 when passing on any information.
Read more:
- Woman arrested on suspicion of attempted murder in Harrogate
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
Grab a picnic rug for open air theatre performances in the district
It has been a week of soaring temperatures across the Harrogate district.
And when the sun shines, there is nothing better than grabbing a picnic rug or deckchair and enjoying some fabulous outdoor entertainment.
We have put together a selection of outdoor theatre performances taking place across the Harrogate district this summer where tickets are still available:
Hamlet The Comedy – RHS Harlow Carr Gardens, July 5 and 6
Festival favourite Oddsocks Productions return to Harrogate with yet another high-energy, feel-good family theatre show.
Pack your picnic and join the crazy theatre troupe for a festival of music, magic and mayhem as they bring Hamlet The Comedy to the beautiful grounds of Harlow Carr.
Hamlet The Comedy finds the eponymous royal student returning home for the summer holidays to find something rotten in the state of Denmark and it’s more than just the bag of dirty washing! Mum’s married Uncle Claudius and Dad’s dishing the dirt from his grave – it’s enough to make a teenager mad!
Shakespeare’s famous tragedy is performed as you’ve never seen before with lots of laughs, music and memorable moments.
Presented by Oddsocks Productions as part of Harrogate International Festivals.
Event details:
Doors open at 6.30pm for Friends of the Festival and RHS card holders.
General admission from 6.45pm.
This is an outdoor event, please dress appropriately for the British weather. Feel free to bring your own picnics, rugs and deckchairs to make the most of the event.
Tickets are available here.
Read more:
- First Ripon Theatre Festival launches tomorrow
- Shortlist revealed for Harrogate’s crime writing festival
Cinderella – Valley Gardens, Harrogate, July 17
In an enchanted kingdom faraway land magical creatures and fairy godmothers come together to tell the best-loved of all fairy tales.
Full of song, mirth, and joy for the summer ahead, join us on Cinderella’s journey of a lifetime to a magical ball where nearly anything is possible especially if it is before midnight.
Family and friends are welcome to picnic and children are invited to dress in their favourite fairy tale characters and join for the midsummer ball dance.
Presented by Chapterhouse Theatre.
Event details:
Doors open at 3pm and the production starts at 4pm.
The performance will last around 90 minutes (with no interval) and will take place in all but the worst weather.
Please bring your own deck chairs, rugs and picnics etc for the performance.
Tickets are available here
Romeo and Juliet – Knaresborough Castle, August 6
This best-loved story of star crossed lovers and feuding families shall be performed in the castle yard.
Dressed in beautiful Elizabethan costume and performed by a fine troupe of Shakespearean players, join Chapterhouse for the greatest love story ever told as they perform magical theatre in magical surroundings.
Presented by Chapterhouse Theatre.
Event details:
Doors open at 6pm and the production starts at 7pm.
The performance will last around 90 minutes (with no interval) and will take place in all but the worst weather.
Please bring your own deck chairs, rugs and picnics etc for the performance.
Tickets are available here
Pride and Prejudice – Ripon Spa Gardens, August 20
Take a step back in time as we meet Elizabeth Bennett and her sisters. Whilst their interfering mother engineers various courtships, Elizabeth and Jane must pursue their own quest for true love.
Amidst mistakes and miscommunications, can Elizabeth finally surpass her prejudices to see past the proud exterior of the enigmatic Mr Darcy?
Presented by Chapterhouse Theatre.
Event details:
Doors open at 6pm, the production starts at 7pm.
The performance will last around 90 minutes (with no interval) and will take place in all but the worst weather.
Please bring your own deck chairs, rugs and picnics etc for the performance.
Tickets are available here
Meet North Yorkshire’s new highways chiefAt 27-years-old, Keane Duncan has been made responsible for one of the largest road networks in the country and an array of multi-million pound highways projects.
It’s been a baptism of fire for the young politician, who has gone from the debates of student politics to the senior councillor in charge of highways in a short space of time.
His new role includes the £10.9 million Station Gateway project, a £60 million scheme to realign the A59 at Kex Gill and the newly incorporated highways company, NYHighways, which will oversee thousands of miles of road.
For Cllr Duncan, the position is an opportunity but he’s also aware of that the role comes with intense scrutiny – particularly in Harrogate.
Youngest county councillor
A resident of the village of Norton and a councillor for seven years, Cllr Duncan began his political career while studying at the University of York.
He got involved with the local Thirsk and Malton Conservatives and asked to stand for council.
“I hadn’t really been politically active until that point.”
He was elected to North Yorkshire County Council and then later to his local district council in Ryedale.
For two years, he was leader of Ryedale District Council – one of the six districts which will be abolished next year to make way for North Yorkshire Council.
However, he stepped down in February 2021 over what he described as a “cruel and unnecessary” council tax hike.
He said:
“It’s a very challenging political landscape over in Ryedale.
“There was no overall control for any party and that represents difficulties in sometimes getting decisions through and doing what we need to do for local people.”
Ahead of the abolition of the county council and districts, Cllr Duncan was a key figure in the debate over what should replace them.
He backed an east/west model for North Yorkshire, while current council leader, Cllr Carl Les, was a proponent of the single unitary model.
Cllr Duncan said:
“I was very much in favour of what was called the east/west proposal.
“I believed passionately in that proposal at the time. I believe passionately in unitary local government, so I wanted to deliver that.”
New highways chief
Fast forward to May this year and Cllr Duncan has been appointed the the executive and will now have a key role in the county’s highways department going into the new council.
While he is now both the youngest member of the council and the executive, Cllr Duncan said he had no expectation of being given the brief.
Read more:
- Another consultation to take place on £10.9m Harrogate Station Gateway
- Under-fire infrastructure plans for west Harrogate will cost taxpayers £25,000
He said he had “no hopes or expectations” of being given a senior position until he was asked by Cllr Les.
He said:
“I was focused on getting myself here on these seats in the council chamber. The leader asked me to join his executive and I was very happy to accept.”
Cllr Duncan added:
“My portfolio area is probably the most public facing. It is the area where we get the most public comments and complaints.”
Multi-million pound Harrogate schemes
One of Cllr Duncan’s pledges since becoming the highways chief is to visit each area of the county.
Earlier this week he visited Ripon and planned to do the same with Harrogate in the near future.

The Harrogate Station Gateway scheme.
The role in the district will prove to be challenging for Cllr Duncan, who will oversee schemes such as the Otley Road cycle route, Beech Grove low traffic neighbourhood and the Kex Gill realignment.
Perhaps the most high profile locally will be the £10.9 million Station Gateway scheme, which is earmarked for a further round of consultation later this year.
When asked for his view on the scheme, which has proved controversial in Harrogate, Cllr Duncan said:
“I’m personally supportive of that scheme and we are wanting to progress it.
“We are going out to a third round of public consultation to ensure that everyone can have their say and their opinions.
“For me, my test on the ground is what do the local councillors think and feel? They are the representatives of their local community.”
Cllr Duncan said he felt that that “on the whole” the council was trying to get the balance right on the various schemes across the district.
However, he added that he was aware of concerns over some of the schemes such as the gateway project.
His new role will also be to field complaints and criticism from the public, but Cllr Duncan said he is determined to do his job well.
Woman arrested on suspicion of attempted murder in Harrogate“It is a difficult portfolio to manage, but I’m determined to do that by hopefully ensuring that we’re listening to people on the ground.”
A woman in her 40s has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder in Bilton.
A man in his 40s has also been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder.
It follows an incident at a house in Byland Road last night when a woman was seriously injured by what police believe to be a “bladed article”.
A North Yorkshire Police statement this evening said:
“It has also been established this was an isolated incident and it is believed there is no further risk to the wider public.”

The scene on Byland Road this morning.
Detective Chief Inspector Jonathan Sygrove, a senior investigation officer, said:
“We hope this goes some way to reassure the residents of Bylands Road and the surrounding areas.”
Police were called to Byland Road at about 5pm yesterday. Forensic officers also attended the scene.
The woman is the second person in the Harrogate area to be arrested on suspicion of attempted murder today.
This morning a 40-year-old man was arrested for the attempted murder of an 11-year-old child and a 10-year-old child, following an incident in Beckwithshaw on Monday.
Police urged anyone with information on the Bilton incident to call 101, or if you wish to remain anonymous, call Crimestoppers instead on 0800 555 111.
Quote reference 12220108308 when providing any information.
Read more:
- Man arrested for attempted murder of two children in Beckwithshaw
- Harrogate firefighters issue smoke alarm warning after house fire