The organisers of the annual bonfire on the Stray in Harrogate have warned that last Saturday’s event could be the last.
Harrogate Round Table has organised the town’s main bonfire for 52 years.
But the charity said today it was struggling to cover the costs and there was a question mark over whether it would be held next year.
In a statement expressing its “heartfelt appreciation” to those who attended Saturday’s event, despite wet weather, the round table said:
“The cost of holding this wonderful community event has risen dramatically over the last three years in line with inflation and the dramatic cost of living that we are all feeling.
“We are still processing payments and accumulating this year’s totals, but at this stage we can see that it is unlikely we will meet previous totals raised and may well struggle to cover the cost of the event. This brings into question the viability of future bonfire events.
“The annual Harrogate charity Stray bonfire night has been a cherished tradition, bringing our community together for the past 52 years. However, due to the increased expenses and risks involved in its planning, we are faced with the unfortunate possibility that this may be the last Harrogate charity Stray bonfire night that Harrogate Round Table hosts, if we do not receive the necessary financial support.”
The statement appealed for donations to “ensure the continuity of this treasured tradition”.
A GoFundMe campaign with a £5,000 has currently generated less than £2,000. You can donate here.
The round table said:
“Your generosity will directly impact our ability to continue hosting these events for everyone to enjoy.
“The Harrogate Round Table team firmly believes in the power of community, and with your support, we can overcome the current challenges and continue to provide memorable experiences for all. Please join us in preserving this wonderful tradition for future generations.”
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Angel on a tractor delivers meals on wheels in Harrogate
A local charity that provides meals and care to older people has rebranded its core service, with a dose of heavenly inspiration.
Harrogate Neighbours provides older people with a daily hot meal, preventing social isolation and enabling them to stay in their own homes where possible.
To mark National Meals on Wheels Week (October 30 to November 3), the service is now known as ‘Harrogate Neighbours Meals on Wheels Delivered by Angels‘. It is run by 50 volunteers known as ‘angels’, who deliver over 150 meals every day.
Sue Cawthray, chief executive of Harrogate Neighbours, said:
“Last year, we delivered meals by horse and carriage and the service-users loved it.
“We wanted to do something a little bit different this year, so we decided to deliver the meals on a vintage 1950s tractor by an angel, which evoked lovely memories for our clients.”
Demand for the service is growing, and the charity is calling for more volunteers to deliver even more meals.
New ‘angel’ Zac Evans said:
“It’s not about finding time – it’s making time to support the local community. Dressing up as an angel and delivering the meals by tractor was an amazing experience and something I certainly won’t forget!
“Being a volunteer and making the time makes a real difference to the service-users we get the chance to meet and have a chat with.”

‘Angel’ Zac Evans making a delivery.
Now in its 11th year, Harrogate Neighbours relies on support from local authorities, businesses and the wider community, and Sue said more government funding was needed to support older and vulnerable people, who without the volunteers who run the service would not receive a nutritionally balanced, hot daily meal. She said:
“The future of meals on wheels looks bleak unless the government can do more to support this much-needed service.
“We are supporting an ageing population, and the service is a lifeline for older and vulnerable people living in our community. We are calling for the government to ensure funding is available to local councils to safeguard the service now and in the future.”
In addition to the domiciliary care and hot meal service it provides, the charity also operates two sites: Heath Lodge Community Haven, a residential care home, and The Cuttings, an extra care housing scheme.
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Business Breakfast: House prices stabilise, data suggest
The Stray Ferret Business Club’s next meeting is a breakfast event on Thursday, October 26 at Banyan in Harrogate from 8am to 10am.
The Business Club provides monthly opportunities to network, make new connections and hear local success stories. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.
After a period of deflation, the housing market showed modest signs of stabilisation this month, the latest data from Rightmove suggest.
Property asking prices edged upwards by an average of £1,950 or 0.5% this month, but Yorkshire and the Humber saw a slightly a bigger increase of 0.6%.
This means the average asking price in Yorkshire and the Humber now stands at £248,000, which is a 1.8% increase on this time last year.
However, the national monthly increase of 0.5% is the smallest average asking price increase at this time of year since 2008, and well below the historic norm in October of 1.4%. The number of sales agreed is also 17% below this time last year, as those sellers who are struggling to adjust their price expectations to match current activity levels are finding their homes left on the shelf.
Rightmove said the number of buyers enquiring for each available home for sale is 8% higher than in the more normal, and pre-Covid, 2019 market. It also revealed that a property that receives its first buyer enquiry on the first day of marketing, rather than after two weeks, is 60% more likely to find a buyer.
Patrick McCutcheon, head of residential at Dacre, Son & Hartley, which has 20 offices across Yorkshire, including branches in Harrogate, Ripon, Knaresborough and Pateley Bridge, said:
“Accurate pricing is vitally important in the current market to generate immediate momentum when launching a property to market. There are buyers waiting for the right homes to come onto the market, but most will steer clear of anything overpriced.
“Although it can be tempting for sellers to price high initially on the off chance there’s a buyer waiting in the wings, and then reduce the price later when it doesn’t sell, this can be a risky strategy in the current market.”
Independent school in charity tie-up
Families living in poverty across Yorkshire will benefit from a new charity link-up after pupils at Ashville Prep School in Harrogate chose Zarach as their charity for the year.
Zarach delivers beds and basic provisions to children living in poverty and was set up by Leeds primary school teacher Bex Wilson after she found that some of the children she taught didn’t have a bed to sleep in.

Pupils at Ashville Prep School donated food at their harvest festival service.
Phil Soutar, Head of Ashville Prep School, said:
“The new link-up reflects Ashville’s values of openness, respect for others and a sense of social responsibility. It is not just about raising money or gifting goods for this great charity, it’s also about raising awareness about the daily hardship faced by people in our community.
“We’re immensely proud of the thoughtfulness and empathy shown by our pupils, as we explore more ways in which we can help others and give back to our community.”
The partnership got off to a successful start at the prep school’s harvest festival service, and the Prep School Charity Club will continue to raise money for Zarach for the remainder of the academic year, helping to pay for “bed bundles” which include a mattress, pillow, duvet, pyjamas, sheets, toothpaste and other sanitary and bathroom products.
Last year, the Prep School Charity Club raised more than £2,500 for Guide Dogs.
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Starbeck counselling charity Wellspring celebrates 20th birthday
Wellspring Therapy and Training, the Harrogate-based counselling and training centre, is about to celebrate its 20th birthday.
The charity provides affordable short and long-term counselling for people in the Harrogate district.
Founded in 2003, it now faces unprecedented demand for its help tackling issues such as mental health and depression.
The Rt Rev Nick Baines, Bishop of Leeds and a patron of Wellspring, is leasing a service at St Andrew’s Church in Starbeck on Sunday, October 15.
Wellspring is also holding a fundraising dinner at the Crown Hotel in Harrogate on Friday November 17.
Emily Fullarton, executive director of Wellspring, said:
“This is a very special year for us. These two exciting events are celebrating how a small local charity has survived and thrived during the past 20 years and how we have tackled the problem of increasing poor mental health, anxiety and depression, which has threatened to overwhelm the NHS.
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Founding director Elaine Wainaina set up Wellspring as a Christian-based organisation to help those struggling with anxiety and depression but it soon extended its services to everyone who needed them.
Wellspring moved from a terraced house in Prospect Road, Starbeck into nearby St Andrew’s Vicarage after it was bought for the charity by the Bramall Foundation.
This has enabled the organisation to expand its services in the Harrogate area since 2018 and to relieve the burden on the NHS.
Wellspring hopes to counsel 170 this year and 220 by the end of 2025. It helps children as young as eight.
Ms Fullarton said:
“In the UK, one in four people will experience a mental health issue at least once in their lifetime. According to local research, many people in Harrogate assume because it is a ‘nice town’ people don’t struggle with these issues. That simply isn’t true. There is a huge demand in Harrogate for our services and it’s increasing.
“What makes Wellspring’s work unique in is that we offer affordable long-term, open-ended counselling where needed. Unfortunately, this type of therapy is not currently widely available from the NHS. Most private counselling typically costs between £50 or more for each session, but many of our clients are unable to afford this.”
Son of Leeds United legend raises funds to beat his own cancer
A father-of-five from Harrogate has launched a campaign to raise funds for his own medical treatment after being diagnosed with a rare and aggressive form of cancer.
Stuart Gray, whose father is Leeds United legend Eddie Gray, has stage four cholangiocarcinoma – a cancer that forms in the bile ducts. He has been told that by the time this cancer begins to show symptoms, it is usually too advanced for surgery, which is currently the only known cure.
Complicating the situation, he has also been diagnosed with primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), a chronic liver disease with no known cure, which doctors believe was a likely contributing factor in the development of the cancer.
Writing on the GoFundMe page set up by his brother Nick, Stuart said:
“The severity of my illness means that doctors expect my life expectancy to be significantly reduced. However, treatments are available for the cholangiocarcinoma that can prolong life expectancy, and in some rare cases even cure this terrible disease, and I am determined to do everything I can to fight it with everything I have.”
By Friday afternoon – just a few days after launch – Stuart, 49, had already raised over £30,000 of his £100,000 goal.
In an update posted today, Stuart said:
“To all the people who have donated and sent messages and good wishes, I want to say how deeply thankful I am to each and every one of you. It means the world to me and my family to see the support we have. Love Stuart x”
Some of the treatments for Stuart’s illness are widely available on the NHS, but some of the newer and more experimental treatments are less readily available and very costly.
In addition, Stuart’s treatment could include biopsies and testing, CT, MRI scans and X-rays, the fitting of stents to relieve pain, alternative wellbeing therapies, and travel and accommodation costs when seeing consultants in London or abroad.
Stuart said:
“Unfortunately, time is not on my side, and to wait for approval of these various experimental treatments, and then for the treatments to be administered by the NHS, will likely take years. Accessing these drugs and treatments privately is costly and can be difficult.
“My family and I will be posting regular updates along the way and will be partaking in various fundraising efforts to help pay for any treatment that may be needed in the coming months and, God willing, years.
“Any help or support you can offer during this process would be appreciated more than you will ever know.”
Stuart will also donate a percentage of the funds raised to AMMF, the cholangiocarcinoma charity. He added:
“If/when treatment is no longer needed, for whatever reason, all of the surplus funds will also go to the AMMF.”
Like his father and his famous uncle, Frankie Gray, Stuart is also a former footballer, having played for various clubs including Celtic and Reading, as well as making seven appearance for Scotland at under-21 level.
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Cat charity to open new Harrogate shop
Cats Protection is set to open a new shop in Harrogate.
The store, which will operate under the charity’s boutique retail arm called Cattitude, will be located at 8 Oxford Street.
The shop, which will sell fashion items and accessories, is seeking volunteers.
Sarah Jordan, retail operations manager at the charity, said:
“We have been hoping to open a store in Harrogate for many years and we’re delighted to finally be able to make this happen.
“The final touches are being put together as we speak and we hope to be able to announce an opening date very soon. In the meantime, anyone looking for new, exciting retail positions is invited to get in touch.”
Cats Protection helps an average of 157,000 cats and kittens a year through its national network, which includes around 210 volunteer-run branches and 34 centres.
Its retail arm helps to raise funds to ensure as many cats as possible can go on to live happy lives.
For more information about volunteering at the charity, visit the Cats Protection website.
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Vote for your favourite summer photo to be included in our charity calendar
The Stray Ferret is launching a charity calendar to showcase this years’ Photo of the Week entries. Now, we need your help to decide the summer images.
From Studley Deer Park to flowing rivers, Photo of The Week showcases the natural beauty offered in the Harrogate district every Sunday.
See the contenders below and vote for your favourites on our competition page! The winning photos will be included in the summer months of the calendar.
- Alistair Hay
- Andy Furniss
- Heather Middleton
- Bill Shaw
- Brian Morrison
- Heather Middleton
- Olivia Rosenvinge
- Pete Durkin
A nine-year-old Harrogate boy is walking 200 miles, inspired by his dad who has Friedrich’s ataxia.
He aims to raise money for Ataxia UK, a charity that funds treatment and provides support for those with ataxia.
Ataxia is a term for a group of neurological disorders that affect balance, coordination and speech
His mum, Helen Gibson, explained the impact of his dad’s condition on Jack:
“Jack and his dad are very close but Jack sometimes struggles as his dad can’t do all of the things he would like him to because of his condition and tires easily.”
Jack attends young carers events in Harrogate. After smashing his original goal to walk 126 miles, he chose to increase his goal to 200 miles.
He has been walking at least three miles a day for four weeks to complete his goal. Some days he has walked as far as 8 miles.
Jack’s inspiration to walk was explained by his mum,
“He chose walking as he said it was something that was free and something that his dad can still do at the moment.”

Jack’s walks have been local, on the Stray or at Fountains Abbey. On holiday, he has completed his walks at Alton Towers or nearby National Trust locations.
He also walked the coast where his parents are originally from.
Both family and friends have joined Jack on his walks.
The family have a goal of £500 and have already raised £435.
If you are interested in donating to Jack’s fundraiser, there is a Just Giving page.
Ukulele group dedicates a year of performances to supporting Harrogate hospiceA year of more than 40 performances has seen a Harrogate ukulele group raise £4,500 for charity.
The group is partnered with Saint Michael’s Hospice, and all donations and performance fees are given to the Harrogate-based charity.
The Harrogate Spa Town Ukes was formed nearly 10 years ago by two members of the Bingley Ukulele club who wanted a group closer to home.
Since then, it has gone from strength to strength.
Bob Mansfield, the group’s events coordinator, said:
“The club has increased steadily over the years with over 40 members now. Ages do vary, but it is fair to say that the majority are around, or over, retirement age. The gender mix is pretty well equal.”
The group meets weekly on Wednesday evenings at Oatlands Social Club and includes many former guitarists.
Mr Mansfield said their sets are “not all George Formby classics”, instead being made up of vintage rock and pop music.
The band has up to 20 players and regularly performs on Saturdays around Harrogate and the surrounding area. All performances are by volunteers with the aim of raising money for charity.
When asked why they chose the ukulele over other instruments, Bob Mansfield referred to a comment made by one audience member, who said, “you can’t listen to the ukulele without smiling”.
Further information about the group can be found on its website.
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Harrogate woman to swim English Channel distance for charity
A Harrogate woman is set to swim the equivalent distance of the English Channel for the 11th time in aid of charity.
Angie Russell, who lives in Bilton, will take on the challenge to raise money for Aspire.
The charity, which was founded in 1982, provides practical support those who have been paralysed by a spinal cord injury.
Angie was inspired to help after reading an article about how the organisation helped a man who broke his spine in a car accident.
She will take on the Aspire channel swim on September 18, which tasks participants with swimming 22 miles over the course of 12 weeks.
Those taking part can swim the distance in their own time and at a place of their choice, such as a local swimming pool.
Speaking ahead of the swim, Angie said:
“I love swimming because I love the water and the freedom it offers, the meditative state it brings and the relaxing and stress-relieving benefits, as well as general fitness and toning.
“I enjoy the Aspire channel swim because it gives me the focus of swimming a certain distance within a certain time.
“I have a busy life and it gives me an ‘excuse’ to take time for myself to go swimming and to help a good cause.”
The Aspire channel swim has so far seen 381 swimmers sign up and raised £6,144.
For more information on the challenge and to donate, visit the Aspire website here.
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