This year’s Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal is for Resurrected Bites in Harrogate and Knaresborough. Today, Vicky finds out what its team and supporters have been doing to ensure its customers can have a happy Christmas, even in difficult circumstances.
Our appeal runs for two more days. Please give generously to support local people who are struggling this Christmas. They need your help.
The festive season may be upon us, but demand for help from Resurrected Bites has never been higher.
Sophia Clark, who runs the organisation’s community grocery in New Park, said:
“We’ve had a really busy two weeks. It’s going to be busy up to Christmas.
“We’re getting a lot of new people in – two just this morning.
“On Tuesday, I had a woman in pieces. She had three children on her own and had gone to do her food shopping. Her direct debit had changed for her gas and electric and they’d left her overdrawn.”
Along with the volunteers at New Park, Sophia was able to fill the woman’s freezer to see her through the festive period and ensure her children wouldn’t go hungry.
She later received a message thanking her for what she had done, concluding: “God bless you, you are a diamond and a special one at that.”
Sadly, the woman was just one of many who have been forced to call on Resurrected Bites for the first time this month alone.
Sophia said:
“We’re seeing lots of things like that at the moment – people in absolute dire straits.
“We’ve had a lot of pensioners in. One lady had gone to deliver a Christmas card to a friend and found her shaking and freezing. She couldn’t afford the heating.”
Read more:
- Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal: ‘I shouldn’t need this- but it’s a lifesaver’
- Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal: ‘We had good jobs but we were still struggling’
Sophia said some of the stories she hears are heart-breaking. Along with volunteer Karen Martin, who also speaks to people arriving at the community grocery to ensure it can meet their needs, Sophia said she often cries in the office behind closed doors once the visitor has left, before getting back to work.
But the very tough side of the job is balanced by the heart-warming elements.
Sophia knows she is making a difference at a time of crisis for many people – messages like the one from the mum whose bill had left her overdrawn provide some comfort amid all the challenges.
There is also fantastic generosity towards Resurrected Bites and its customers, especially at this time of year.
When I visited the New Park community grocery last week, there was a small Santa’s grotto in the corner, with a volunteer ensuring children could meet Father Christmas even if their parents couldn’t afford to buy tickets for a commercial event.
The shelves had been stacked that morning with toys and chocolates for those who wouldn’t be able to afford treats. Although they had been snapped up quickly, more were still coming in and being laid out for other customers.
Resurrected Bites founder Michelle Hayes said:
“A few people have expressed concern about not being able to buy presents for their families this year.
“The last thing we want is people taking out loans. So we’ve been able to give out presents to make sure they have something to unwrap on Christmas Day.”
Businesses and individuals have been generous with selection boxes, tubs of sweets and other small luxuries for Resurrected Bites to distribute to its customers.
There have also been deliveries of blankets, warm jumpers and festive decorations.
The Christmas tree in Santa’s grotto at New Park came from the festival at St Thomas the Apostle Church in Killinghall, donated by Mole Country Stores near Ripley. After being on display at the community grocery, the firm asked that it be given to a family who wouldn’t otherwise have a Christmas tree.
The amount of food and other treats available is a dramatic improvement from earlier this year, when demand was outstripping the volume of waste food arriving from supermarkets.
Sophia said the kind of generosity in evidence in the run-up to Christmas – and knowing how much difference she and the volunteers could make to people – is what has kept her going in challenging times.
“I look at those people and the feedback I get. That’s what I do this for: I get to help people and make a change.
“I had message after message last night from people asking if they could come down [to shop]. I’m just so grateful we’ve got the food to give them.
“A couple of months ago, it was so low, but now at least I know nobody has to go without for Christmas.”
Nobody in the Harrogate district should go hungry this Christmas.
It costs £300 to run the community grocery for one day. Please help to keep it open for everyone who relies on it.
Click here to contribute now.
Rabbit Hill Country Store closes todayRabbit Hill Country Store will close for good today.
The store has sold a wide range of animal and pet products, as well as gardening items and workwear, since 2016.
Located close to the A1 on Rabbit Hill Business Park at Arkendale, between Boroughbridge and Knaresborough, it has played a major role in the farming and rural community.
Landscape and forestry supplier Green-tech owns the business park and the store.
In a social media post, the store said “the many external variables and well documented strains on retail outlets has led us to take this difficult decision”, adding:
“The closure of Rabbit Hill Country Store will allow the Green-tech team to concentrate our efforts and resources on the ambitious growth plans of our other brands.
“We would like to thank every customer, supplier, colleague and friend that has supported Rabbit Hill Country Store over the years it has been appreciated.”
Read more:
- New managers take over historic Knaresborough hotel
- Police stinger stops stolen Land Rover after high speed chase from Boroughbridge
The store has been holding closing down sales in recent weeks, and today advertised 70% off products for its final day. It is due to close at 4pm.
One person responded to the news on social media by saying:
“The store is well used and a vital asset for the local rural community.”
Another said:
“It is a shame that a store that has supplied the local domestic and farming community is to close.”
The Stray Ferret contacted Green-tech for further details but it declined to comment.
Festive bin collection dates revealed in Harrogate districtHarrogate Borough Council has published details of changes to waste and recycling collection days over the festive period.
This year, there will only be changes on the week commencing Monday, December 26.
- Monday 26 December will be collected Tuesday 27 December
- Tuesday 27 December will be collected Wednesday 28 December
- Wednesday 28 December will be collected Thursday 29 December
- Thursday 29 December will be collected Friday 30 December
- Friday 30 December will be collected Saturday 31 December
Collections will return to normal on Monday 2 January.
Anyone who is unsure of their dates can check here on the council website.
Details of what can be recycled or reused, including wrapping paper, are available here.
Household waste recycling centres in the Harrogate district are open every day over the festive period except Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day.
They are open every other day from 8.30am to 4pm except on Wednesdays, when they are closed.
Details of when the recycling centres and other services run by North Yorkshire County Council are open over the holidays are here.
Read more:
- Councillor ‘shocked and disappointed’ by parking changes at Nidderdale Showground
- New Mediterranean restaurant opens in Harrogate
Stray Ferret Business Awards: Rising star award celebrates young talent
The Stray Ferret Business Awards 2023 are for businesses across all sectors in the Harrogate district.
Over the next few weeks we will reveal what our judging panel is looking for when it comes to each of the 10 categories.
Next up is the Rising Star under 30 Award, which is sponsored by Thompsons Chartered Accountants.
This award is designed to highlight some of the young talent from across the Harrogate district.
Those nominated or who enter for the Rising Star under 30 Award are sure to make waves and build a successful career in the years to come.
Entries for this category need to provide details of the person’s background and position they hold in the business. Provide examples of how the entrant’s work ethic has affected the business.
Do you know someone who deserves to win the Rising Star Under 30 Award at the Stray Ferret Business Awards? Entries close on January 16. It’s simple and quick, so enter today!
Click here or the banner below to enter for the Stray Ferret Business Awards, sponsored by Prosperis.
Harrogate district swimming pools achieve national accreditationSwimming pools in the Harrogate district have received a national accreditation from Swim England.
The Water Wellbeing accreditation aims to transform community swimming pool into places for health, wellbeing and rehabilitation.
The award has been granted to Starbeck Baths, the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre, Knaresborough Swimming Pool and Nidderdale Pool and Leisure Centre.
Brimhams Active, which runs the facilities, carried out changes to ensure all pools are accessible, inclusive and inviting to the local community in order to achieve the accreditation.
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, said:
“I’m delighted that through the hard work and dedication of the Brimhams Active team, with the support of Swim England, we have achieved Swim England’s Water Wellbeing accreditation at our facilities.
“Inactivity and the determinants of poor health adversely impact on thousands of people in our communities. Our mission is to help address this by supporting people to move more, live well and feel great, and to do this we are creating an inclusive, holistic, health and wellbeing focused service offer.”
Read more:
- Harrogate leisure chief defends Ripon pool location amid ground stability concern
- Harrogate swimming club seeks sponsor to keep head above water
As part of the accreditation, exercise referral instructors have received training to deliver Swim England’s aquatic activity for health programme, which allows the team to deliver pool-based group exercise for people living with long term health conditions.
Meanwhile, swimming will be able to lead adult swimming lessons for people with health conditions, and all customer facing members of the team have had additional customer experience training, with a focus on inclusivity.
Andrew Power, Swim England’s water wellbeing specialist, said:
Ambulance workers in Harrogate district begin strike“Swim England have been supporting Brimhams Active this past year across a number of key areas, in order to maximise the long term sustainability and growth of their aquatic assets.
“It has been an absolute pleasure to work with the Brimhams Active team at all levels, who have shown total commitment to the accreditation process and have gone beyond what was expected of them in doing so.
“I look forward to seeing the impact of this work and benefits to the local community, particularly around improved health and wellbeing for years to come.”
A picket line is in place outside Harrogate Ambulance Station today in the latest round of strikes.
Staff at Yorkshire Ambulance Service have walked out as part of a national dispute over pay and conditions. A second day of strikes is due to take place on December 28.
Vehicles tooted their horns in support of members of the GMB union picketing on Lancaster Park Road, which is on the same street at Harrogate Disrict Hospital.
Nurses and firefighters have also showed their support and a local cafe dropped off hot chocolate to strikers shivering besides a fire.
Union organiser Katherine Mitchell told the Stray Ferret GMB staff were striking today from one minute past midnight until 10pm. Ms Mitchell said members of Unison were due to join the action at noon today.
She said about 60 staff were employed at Harrogate Ambulance Station and they would continue to respond to the most serious category one incidents during the strike. Some strikers had already been called in to deal with such incidents, she added.
Several staff said the dispute was not only about pay but also about conditions and the state of the NHS. One person said they had waited four hours outside Harrogate District Hospital recently with a patient because the hospital did not have enough staff to escort the person away.
Health Secretary Steve Barclay said this morning NHS contingency plans would not cover all 999 calls and that “ambulance unions have taken a conscious choice to inflict harm on patients” — which drew an angry response from union leaders.
Rail and postal workers in the Harrogate district have been on strike this winter, but Harrogate District Hospital was not included in the first two days of nurses strikes. Firefighters are expected to be balloted in the new year over strike action.
Read more:
- No walkout at Harrogate hospital as part of nurses strike
- Harrogate district braced for rail and postal strikes
Stray Ferret Business Awards: Does your business deserve the Business Growth award?
The Stray Ferret Business Awards 2023 are for businesses across all sectors in the Harrogate district.
Over the next few weeks we will reveal what our judging panel is looking for when it comes to each of the 10 categories.
Next up is the Business Growth Award, which is sponsored by Raworths.
This award is designed to recognise those businesses that have seen significant growth in the last three years.
Business growth could be measured either financially, by employee numbers of market share increase.
Companies looking to enter for the Business Growth Award need to provide evidence of the growth, background information as to the reason for growth and plans for the future.
Does your business deserve to win the Business Growth Award at the Stray Ferret Business Awards? Entries close on January 16. It’s simple and quick, so enter today!
Click here or the banner below to enter for the Stray Ferret Business Awards, sponsored by Prosperis.
Ambulance strike to hit Harrogate district tomorrowHarrogate hospital bosses have said plans are in place to “minimise” the impact of forthcoming ambulance strikes.
Staff at Yorkshire Ambulance Service will walk out tomorrow (December 21) and next Wednesday (December 28) for 24 hours in a dispute over pay.
The move is part of a wave of industrial action taking place across England throughout the winter, with rail staff and nurses also staging walkouts.
In response to the strikes by ambulance workers, Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust has urged patients to continue to come forward for care.
A spokesperson for the hospital trust said:
“We are working hard to keep patients safe during strikes, while delivering the best care possible, and patients should continue to attend appointments as planned unless contacted to reschedule.
“Nobody should put off seeking urgent or emergency care during the strikes, with key services continuing to operate.”
The trust added that it has contingency plans in place in accident and emergency, as well as measures to discharge patients, during the days of strike action.
It added:
“The safety of our patients is our utmost priority and we have contingency plans in place to minimise any impact industrial action will have.
“For instance, additional staff will be on duty in our emergency department on these days to manage any increase in walk-in attendances for those people unable to travel to hospital by ambulance.
“We also have alternative arrangements in place to help manage the discharge of patients who are unable to make their own travel arrangements so that they can leave our hospital in a timely manner.”

Harrogate District Hospital, Lancaster Park Road.
Meanwhile, managers at Yorkshire Ambulance Service have urged the public to only call 999 for an ambulance for life-threatening conditions or injuries amid stretched resources during strike action.
An agreement is in place between the unions and the service to cover life-threatening calls.
Nick Smith, executive director of operations at Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust, said:
“With continued operational pressures and the added challenge of industrial action, we will have less resources available to respond.
“Services will be severely disrupted, with the likelihood of significant delays.”
Ambulance staff ‘had enough’
Union membership in
Yorkshire Ambulance Service employs 7,200 staff, of which about 4,000 belong to either Unison or the GMB unions.
It is one of nine ambulance trusts across the country whose workers have voted to strike.
Paramedics, emergency care assistants and call handlers will be among those planning to walk out tomorrow.
Staff at the ambulance trust voted to stage the strike in protest at a 4% government pay award.
Rachael Harrison, GMB Union general secretary, said workers have “had enough”.
She said:
Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal smashes £20,000 target for Resurrected Bites“The last thing they want to do is take strike action, but the government has left them with no choice.
“(Health Secretary) Steve Barclay needs to listen and engage with us about pay. If he can’t talk to us about this most basic workforce issue, what on earth is he Health Secretary for?
“The government could stop this strike in a heartbeat – but they need to wake up and start negotiating on pay.”
This year’s Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal is for Resurrected Bites in Harrogate and Knaresborough. Today, Vicky gives an update on the fundraising, with five days left of the appeal.
Please give generously to support local people who are struggling this Christmas. They need your help.
An incredible £22,000 has been raised for Resurrected Bites in less than four weeks thanks to the generosity of Stray Ferret readers.
As well as contributions from individuals across the district, many businesses have donated to the Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal.
Taking us over our £20,000 total this week was a fantastic £5,000 from Windsor Private Office Financial Planning, based in Harrogate.
Every penny from those donations goes directly to Resurrected Bites. Click here to see the latest total.
The Stray Ferret chose to support Resurrected Bites after it warned in autumn that it faced significant financial challenges in running its community groceries and pay-as-you-feel cafes, all using food that would otherwise go to landfill.
It costs £7,500 each month to keep the organisation going, and its income was falling short by £3,000 every month.
Michelle Hayes, founder of Resurrected Bites, said:
“A massive thank you to the Stray Ferret for running the appeal and to everybody who has donated.
“This money is going to give us security for about eight months, covering the shortfall we have. We’re in a much stronger position starting 2023 than we were a few months ago.”
We launched the appeal on November 29 to run for four weeks until Christmas. With an initially modest target of £5,000, we soon realised we were going to pass that in a matter of days.
We increased the target to £20,000 and your donations continued to roll in.
Knowing the challenges of the cost of living crisis and the extra strain on many household budgets these days, we have been overwhelmed by just how generous our readers have been in supporting Resurrected Bites.
It’s all down to the willingness of its members and volunteers to be open about the challenges facing them. From the young Ukrainian family working to build a new life in Knaresborough to the single mum and full-time NHS employee whose circumstances changed dramatically, they have illustrated how vital Resurrected Bites is to so many local people.
Their powerful stories have also highlighted how easily many of us could end up in the same situation.
It’s often said that many households are just one pay day away from being in serious financial trouble. If you were to lose your job, or find yourself unable to work, could you cover your bills and still put food on the table?
Read more:
- Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal: ‘I shouldn’t need this – but it’s a lifesaver’
- Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal: ‘We had good jobs but we were still struggling’
- Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal: ‘My life collapsed like a wicket’
That situation is facing new people every day. Michelle said just this week, there have been more people coming through the doors of the community groceries, looking for support to get them through the toughest of circumstances.
She said:
“It has been heartbreaking this week, with people who haven’t heard of us before getting in touch very late in the day saying they have nothing for Christmas, no presents for the kids.
“The situation is certainly not improving.”
Resurrected Bites is there to support people with dignity, providing affordable groceries – and reducing food waste at the same time – for as long as people need them.
While calls for help have continued to come in, so have donations of food. Resurrected Bites is often chosen as the recipient of ‘reverse advent calendars’, where organisers put an item in a box every day through December and donate it all at the end of the month.
Anyone wishing to give food can do so at Resurrected Bites’ warehouse at the rear of Disability Action Yorkshire on Hornbeam Park Oval, Harrogate, on Wednesday, December 21 or Thursday, December 22, between 9am and noon.
Meanwhile, we may have passed our £20,000 fundraising target, but our appeal continues right up until Christmas.
Later this week, we’ll bring you stories about how Resurrected Bites is helping to make Christmas magical for everyone, ensuring people are fed and children don’t go without presents.
Please keep donating to the appeal. It really will make all the difference to local people this Christmas and beyond.
Nobody in the Harrogate district should go hungry this Christmas.
It costs £300 to run the community grocery for one day. Please help to keep it open for everyone who relies on it.
Click here to contribute now. Thank you.
Calls for North Yorkshire Council to hand local areas more powersA senior county councillor has backed giving greater powers to North Yorkshire Council area constituency committees.
Currently, county councillors in parliamentary constituency areas such as Harrogate and Knaresborough meet every two months to discuss and debate issues from education and transport to housing and the environment.
These area constituency committees can propose motions and make recommendations to the council’s executive, but in practice, the bodies have little power.
The impending abolition of the seven district councils in North Yorkshire will concentrate decision-making into the hands of the new unitary authority in Northallerton, which has led to concerns that local councillors will find it harder to influence decisions affecting their areas.
However, Conservative councillor for Mid-Craven, Simon Myers, who also has responsibility for planning on the council’s executive, said he supports area committees “taking some of the burden” off North Yorkshire Council.
He said:
“I was involved with running Craven District Council for many years and I know how many decisions we took.
“The idea that the executive can take all those decisions from Bentham to Scarborough is to me, too much work. I can see using area committees to take some of that burden as a valid thing to do.”
Read more:
- 20mph speed limits to be investigated in Harrogate and Knaresborough
- Harrogate council error sees Pinewoods conservation miss out on over £30,000
At a meeting of the Skipton and Ripon’s area committee last week, Andy Brown, Green Party councillor for Aire Valley, said local government reorganisation presented an opportunity for area constituency committees to become “more than talking shops”.
Cllr Brown said:
“We have to decide whether the area committees are with people with a vision for the area and are thirsty with ideas, or do we want to lobby the MP and listen to a few reports?
“We’d like to be hearing officers on important issues like economic development, we’d like powers on things like planning. We’d like to send a message to the executive that local area committees need to be significant.”
Last week, North Yorkshire County Council announced the new authority will create six new planning committees to oversee decisions across parliamentary constituency areas to run alongside the current area committees.