People with new year’s resolutions to improve their fitness are being sought by Saint Michaels Hospice to set themselves a new challenge.
The Harrogate charity is looking for 60 runners to take part in this year’s Great North Run and raise money to support its work.
Last year, runners at the event raised £30,000 for the hospice, which works with families living with terminal illness and bereavement.
Saint Michael’s chief executive Tony Collins said:
“New year is the ideal time to take up a personal fitness and wellbeing challenge. What better way to stay motivated than by knowing that your running challenge will bring care and comfort to local families at the most difficult of times.
“As an independent local charity, we rely on our community to help raise the majority of the funds we need to provide our vital care.”
“By taking part in the Great North Run for Saint Michael’s, you’ll be helping us to care for patients and their families in their own homes as well as at our hospice, and providing much-needed support for children, young people, and adults living with bereavement.”
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The hospice offers participants tips to prepare for the half marathon, and has a marquee in the charity village with drinks and goody bags after runners cross the finishing line.
However, a spokesperson said there was usually a “flurry” of interest and sign-ups after the ballot places were announced in February, so anyone hoping to take part should sign up soon to avoid disappointment.
Entries are £30 each and there is a discount for people signing up in teams. Supporter David Brigham was one of those taking part with his daughter Charlotte Simpson last year.
He said:
“The atmosphere was amazing with a feeling of great achievement as runners collected their medals and had photographs taken to remember the occasion. Personally, I will never forget the experience and the pride in what we achieved.”
The Great North Run will take place on Sunday, September 10, starting in Newcastle and finishing in South Shields. To find out more about taking part for Saint Michael’s Hospice, click here.
Freemason grants totalling £94,000 given to district charitable organisationsEight organisations in the Harrogate district have benefitted from a share of £94,000 worth of grants provided by the Freemasons.
Freemasonry is a male only, fraternal organisation that traces its origins back to the local guilds of stonemasons.
A total of 40 grants have been distributed to organisations across Yorkshire, with many charitable organisations, including youth clubs, food banks, community groups and schools.
Those Harrogate District organisations benefiting from the latest round of grant giving were:
- Artizan Café and Creative Space, Harrogate, £5,000
- Henshaw’s Society for Blind People, £3,395,
- Harrogate Hospital Radio, Harrogate, £3,000, for broadcasting software
- Coppice Valley Primary School, Harrogate, £2,748, for outdoor playground equipment
- Ripon’s Men’s Shed, Ripon, £2,000, for woodworking equipment
- Girlguiding Birk Crag Centre, Harrogate, £2,000, for shop storage, display units, seating and furniture
- Supporting Older People, Harrogate and Knaresborough, £1,586, for warm comfort packs
- Ripon YMCA, Ripon, £1,000, for branded clothing for staff and youth leaders
- Staveley Sports Association, Staveley, Knaresborough, £1,000, for football goal posts, nets and equipment
James H Newman, OBE, The Provincial Grand Master of The Province of Yorkshire West Riding, said:
“With these grants we are able to financially support 40 organisations, which are each integral to the local area in their own way, is something I am very proud of.
“Each year, we donate some £200,000 from this specific fund to good causes around the Province, with the money coming directly from our members, keen to help support the community they live and work in.
“These grants were a superb way to end 2022, and the money each of these 40 recipients is receiving will help them continue the work they do in their own individual communities.”
Based on the old West Riding, the Province has around 5,000 members and reaches from Sheffield in the South to Ripon in the North, Goole in the East to Bentham in the West.
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Harrogate man to shave lockdown locks for hospice tomorrow
A Harrogate man who has been growing his hair since before the first lockdown in March 2020 is to have it shaved this weekend to raise funds for Saint Michael’s Hospice.
Graeme Fenwick will be left completely bald at The Harlow on College Street in Harrogate, where he and wife Linda will be wearing t-shirts supporting the charity.
Linda has been supporting him and sharing the fundraiser on social media to raise as much money as possible.
She said:
“After some ribbing by family and friends about cutting his hair, he announced he would if I could raise £1,000 for Saint Michael’s Hospice.”
Since then, they have raised more than £1,600 and some donors have promised to attend the event on Saturday to see Mr Fenwick shave his head in person.
A local barber will remove his locks but friends and family will also be able to have a go with the clippers.
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Saint Michael’s, which provides care to people living with terminal illness and bereavement, is close to the couple’s heart as Ms Fenwick’s dad and other family and friends spent time at its Hornbeam Park hospice.
The pair said they have been overwhelmed by the response they have had on their JustGiving page.
Ms Fenwick told the Stray Ferret:
“We were in a taxi the other night and were talking about it and when we were getting out the taxi driver donated £30 and said it sounded like a good cause.”
To donate to the appeal, click here.
‘This is for everyone I work with’ says Knaresborough woman made MBEA charity director from Knaresborough has been made an MBE in the first King’s New Year Honours.
Julia Skelton leads Mind the Gap, a Bradford-based arts company that specialises in offering training to and performances by people with learning disabilities and autism.
Having been in post for more than 20 years, including leading the organisation through the covid pandemic, she was still surprised to receive the email informing her she was being offered the honour. She said:
“My first reaction was to assume it was a hoax! Having established via a trusted colleague that it wasn’t, my second reaction was to be very embarrassed, having spent many years working hard to put others in the limelight.”
Read more:
- Leading education pair in Harrogate now have matching royal honours
- ‘I hope we’ve made a difference’ says Harrogate charity founder awarded MBE
Despite the honour being in her name, Julia said she recognised it as something for the entire theatre company.
She said:
“Some people get nominated for an MBE for their individual endeavours. Not me though – without question this recognition is for Mind the Gap and everyone, past, present and future, who’s contributed to the company’s success.
“In particular, the fantastic learning disabled and autistic artists who underpin everything we do and what we are about. And for those who collaborate artistically and more broadly so the company can create and tour work, and support skills development.”
Julia said she hoped the honour would help to promote the arts, especially as they face cuts to public funding and other challenges.
She also paid tribute to all women receiving honours, adding:
Harrogate homeless charity re-homes its 100th resident“I’m just one of thousands of women who plug away day in, day out, to further the success of things they believe in.
“I’m pleased to accept this award in celebration of all women’s achievements, especially those living and working in the north.”
A Harrogate homeless charity has celebrated rehousing its 100th resident in nearly 10 years.
Lifeline, which is based on East Parade, works in partnership with the Harrogate Homeless Project to help those who used to be homeless.
The charity was founded in 2013 and has since gone on to rehouse 100 people as part of its supported housing programme.
Speaking after the achievement, Carl Good, CEO of Lifeline Harrogate, said:
“This is such a special moment.”
“We have seen so many amazing changes in people’s lives and have supported many people into their own accommodation, many leaving Lifeline with jobs and hence a sustainable lifestyle.”

Lifeline residents out on a day trip
Mr. Good started the company with his wife Georgie because they wanted to help the homeless.
They recall meeting a man in the winter of 2011 who was sleeping in a tunnel on Bower Road.
He said:
“It really moved us both to think that we were going to a nice warm house and here was a man sat out in the cold.”
“It made us think much more deeply about the issue of homelessness.”
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Lifeline has six three-bedroom houses where they re-home their residents.
The houses are owned by Green Pastures, a national Christian housing social enterprise, and leased to the charity.
Residents will usually stay in the three-bedroom houses provided by Lifeline for up to a year.
However, Mr. Good told The Stray Ferret:
“There is no fixed time, we want to support them for independent living.”
Starbeck woman, 67, takes on swimming charity challenge
A Starbeck woman is set to take on a 50-length swim in aid of a children’s cancer charity.
Carol Bland, who is 67 and has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, arthritis and fibromyalgia, aims to raise funds for Candelighters, which helped her after her 12-year-old daughter Faye died.
Faye had leukaemia and passed away in 1991.
Carol said the Leeds-based charity helped the family during the two years her daughter was ill.
She said:
“The Candlelighters did a lot for us as a family for the two years that Faye was ill. They also provided us with a free caravan at Primrose Valley after we lost her.”
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The 67-year-old now wants to thank the charity for their help and is planning a 50-length swim at Starbeck Pool.
She will take on the challenge on her birthday and is asking for donations instead of presents.
Carol added:
“I’m not in the best of health anymore and can’t participate in the walks or runs so I decided that for my birthday on December 17 instead of presents I would ask for sponsorship to do a 50-length swim of Starbeck Pool.”
For more information about Candlelighters and to donate to Carol’s swimming challenge, visit the donations page here.
Christmas market and firework finale come to Knaresborough this weekendThe festive season gets underway in Knaresborough this weekend with the Christmas Market and the launch of the Christmas Tree Festival.
Centred around the large Christmas tree in the town’s historic Market Place, the two-day shopping event, on Saturday and Sunday, December 3 and 4, will feature almost 60 stalls selling seasonal goods, decorations, cards, gifts and locally-sourced produce.
Hot roasted chestnuts, mulled wine and performances by local dancers, brass bands and choirs promise to add to the festive atmosphere.
Knaresborough Chamber of Trade and Commerce committee member Charlotte Gale said:
“We have a fantastic range of local independent shops, galleries, cafes and restaurants in town, not just in the market square, but on the surrounding streets and High Street.
“We hope that visitors to the market will also take the time to explore everything which Knaresborough has to offer. There is even a book signing at Castlegate Books with best selling local crime author Wes Markin from noon on Saturday.
“Knaresborough’s businesses always make such an effort to decorate their windows for Christmas, which gives a wonderful festive feeling in town on the market weekend.
“There are lots of events happening around the town too, including a shopping event at Knaresborough train station and the start of the stunning Christmas Tree Festival at St John’s Church, which features beautifully decorated trees from local businesses and organisations.”
The Christmas Market is organised by volunteers from Knaresborough Rotary, Knaresborough Chamber and Knaresborough Lions.
Free park and ride
The centre of Knaresborough will be largely pedestrianised for the event, but a free park and ride is available all weekend from the GSPK car park (postcode HG5 8LF) on Manse Lane to Chapel Street, close to the Market Square.
The weekend will close at 4.30pm on Sunday, December 4 with a firework finale, set against the dramatic backdrop of Knaresborough’s famous viaduct and the Nidd Gorge. This is best seen from any viewpoint which overlooks the river area.

Market chair Hazel Haas, of Knaresborough Rotary, said:
“We are keen that this year’s market benefits the town as a whole.
“Members of our volunteer committee have been liaising with other local organisations and businesses to ensure that we are promoting the full range of festive events taking place in Knaresborough over the market weekend, including the popular Christmas Tree Festival at St John’s Church.”
The Christmas Tree Festival at St John’s will run from Saturday December 3 until December 23.
Every year more than 70 Christmas trees decorated by local groups and businesses are displayed in the church on Vicarage Lane.
Read more:
- Guide to Christmas fairs and markets in the Harrogate district
- Time to sparkle: Your guide to Christmas lights switch-ons across the district
Admission is free, but there will be the opportunity to donate to the church and the event’s chosen charity for this year.
For more information on Knaresborough Christmas Market, including travel information, entertainment timings and events taking place throughout the town, click here.
Meanwhile, Harrogate’s Christmas Fayre kicked off today and tonight (Friday) sees the return of late night shopping in Pateley Bridge and Bewerley for the first time since 2019.
Shops will stay open until about 7.30pm to offer festive treats and community groups will operate stalls along the High Street.
Harrogate’s Christmas Fayre got underway today and next week sees Boroughbridge’s late night shopping and Christmas lights switch-on event on Wednesday (December 7).
Harrogate district people with disabilities urged to have their say on housing tomorrowPeople with disabilities in the Harrogate district have been invited to attend a debate tomorrow night about accessible housing.
Harrogate-based charity Disability Action Yorkshire has assembled a panel of four experts for the event, which will take place at the Cedar Court Hotel in Harrogate at 5pm.
Titled ‘Accessible Housing for Everyone in North Yorkshire’, the event gives disabled people the chance to have their say and influence decisions on assisted living.
Jackie Snape, chief executive of Disability Action Yorkshire, said:
“The aim of the evening is for disabled people to tell us, and more importantly our panellists, about their housing needs.
“Our hope is that their comments will help influence future assisted living decisions made by the new North Yorkshire Council, which in turn will deliver benefits to those disabled people looking to live in their own homes.”
The panel includes:
- Richard Webb, North Yorkshire County Council corporate director for health and adult services
- Sarah Roxby, Wakefield Clinical Commissioning Group‘s associate director of health.
- Cllr Mike Chambers, Harrogate Borough Council cabinet member for housing and safer communities
- Christina McGill, Habinteg Housing Association‘s director of social impact and external affairs
Disability Action Yorkshire chair, Neil Revely, will head the panel.
New 36-bed home
This year, Disability Action Yorkshire, in partnership with Highstone Housing Association, was granted approval by Harrogate Borough Council to replace its 20-bed care home on Claro Road, Harrogate with a new 36-bed care home.
The £7.5 million complex will also include a base for Disability Action Yorkshire staff, who will be on site 24-hours a day.
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Ms Snape said:
“Our assisted living scheme, which will be completed by this time next year, is one of the most significant developments in our 85-year history. It fulfils one of our key ambitions, to give disabled people the independence they crave.
“Whilst our panellists have a wealth of expertise in this area, we believe it’s vital that they hear from the district’s disabled community. These are the people who more often than not need some form of assistance to live independently, and we need to ensure these needs are properly met.”
If you would like to participate in the debate, contact Jackie Snape via email or telephone at: 01423855410.

The breaking ground ceremony at Claro Road with, from left to right, Disability Action Yorkshire chair Neil Revely, The Mayor of the Borough of Harrogate Cllr Victoria Oldham, Harrogate & Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, and Highstone Housing Association executive director Joanne Hawley.
Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal 2022: Help ensure nobody goes hungry this ChristmasThis year’s Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal is for Resurrected Bites in Harrogate and Knaresborough. Please read Vicky’s story about the charity below and give generously to support local people who are struggling this Christmas. They need your help.
This Christmas, there are local people – colleagues, neighbours, friends – young, elderly and working age people — who will not be able to put food on their tables.
There is help at hand from local organisation Resurrected Bites – but it’s facing a tough time too.
Just weeks ago, it warned it faced an uncertain future: its own costs are rising, the amount being donated had dropped, and more and more people are looking for help.
That’s why, from now until Christmas, the Stray Ferret is calling on everyone to give their support to this vital local organisation to help us secure its future.
All donations go directly to Resurrected Bites and will be generously match-funded by Harrogate firm Techbuyer, up to the value of £5,000.
Over the next four weeks, I’ll bring you stories that show just how important the work of Resurrected Bites is. Please read them, share them, and donate whatever you can.
The story of Resurrected Bites
“Harrogate is a really difficult place to be poor.
“There’s this perception that it’s all rosy, but that’s not the case for a lot of people.”
It was this realisation that prompted Michelle Hayes to do something to make a difference across the Harrogate district.
The former research scientist founded a food waste café as part of her role as mission and outreach worker, employed by St Mark’s Church but covering the whole of Harrogate.
Resurrected Bites began life in 2018 in the foyer of the church on Leeds Road, using food from supermarkets and some local hospitality businesses which would otherwise be thrown away. There was nothing wrong with the food, other than perhaps passing its ‘best before’ guidance date – but it would have ended up in a bin.
She was inspired by the Real Junk Food Project in Leeds, founded by Adam Smith. Not only was it reducing food waste, it was making a significant difference to people. Michelle said:
“It literally saved a guy’s life. He had lost his job and had no money, and he couldn’t see a way forward. He was contemplating ending his own life.
“He walked past the café, went in and got a meal, and ended up becoming a volunteer. It saved his life.”
The Harrogate café proved to be a success. Not only did it reduce food waste across the Harrogate area, it provided hot meals on a pay-as-you-feel basis to local people, and offered an opportunity to soclialise too.
Michelle turned it into a community interest company, meaning it is run for the benefit of the community and its income is used to continue this work.
Expansion
In 2020, Resurrected Bites began to expand, with a second café at Gracious Street Methodist Church in Knaresborough launching in January, followed by a third at West Park United Reformed Church, in early March.
Then, of course, everything changed.
The arrival of covid meant the cafes all had to close immediately, but Michelle and the small team of volunteers knew there was still a role for them. They began distributing food parcels to the many local people who suddenly found themselves out of work and short on money.
Just a fraction of the food donated to Resurrected Bites every week during covid lockdowns
At the height of covid, they were intercepting three tonnes of food waste every week and ensuring it reached people who would otherwise not have enough to eat.
Michelle said:
“I realised the scale of food poverty in the area. It was shocking.
“I knew then that once we stopped doing the deliveries, we still had to have a mechanism to get things to people who really needed it.”
Community groceries
While restrictions were still in place, Michelle began working on the next stage of the project: community groceries.
Using the same principle as the cafés of taking food that was still perfectly edible but would not be sold commercially, they were designed to help households who could not afford enough food.
The community groceries allow people to choose their own food from the shelves. Members pay a small fee – £3 for a household up to three, £6 for four or more people – and for that can select a set number of fresh, frozen and packaged goods, as well as toiletries and household products.
Two groceries opened in autumn 2021, at Gracious Street and New Park Community Hub. Demand has grown enormously in the year since, as their reputation has spread.
The number of customers at the cafés has also risen and there are plans in place to open a third, in Killinghall, in the new year. Michelle said:
“When I set up the cafes, the community groceries weren’t even on my radar.
“Resurrected Bites has been a lot more successful than I had anticipated. It is meeting a lot of need in our community.”
It’s clear the cafés and groceries are badly needed. With the cost of living crisis hitting and recession looming, that need is only likely to grow.
It already costs £7,500 every month to deliver those vital services. Please donate to the Stray Ferret’s Christmas appeal to ensure Resurrected Bites can continue supporting people who badly need it in 2023 and beyond.
Nobody in the Harrogate district should go hungry this Christmas.
Whatever you can donate will help local people to feed themselves – and prevent food waste too.
Just £10 can pay for a family’s weekly shopping in the community grocery. Click here to contribute now.
Read more:
- Food waste organisation Resurrected Bites warns it could close
- Volunteer sets up artisan market in Knaresborough to support food waste charity
Harrogate girls to cut hair to raise funds for friend with luekaemia
Two girls from Harrogate will cut and donate their hair to charity to raise funds for The Candlelighters Trust charity.
Holly, 7, and Heidi, 5, will have their locks removed next month and donate their hair to the Little Princess Trust, which will turn it into real hair wigs.
The two girls have been growing their hair since last November in support of their friend Sophia Felgate, 7, who has acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.
Sophia was first diagnosed in 2018, just a week after her third birthday. She finished treatment in August 2020, however the cancer returned last November.
The idea came from Holly wanting to give Sophia her own hair to “make her feel better”, after Sophia lost her hair due to chemotherapy and immunotherapy.
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The Candlelighters Trust provides practical, emotional and financial support to families of children with cancer.
They have been helping the Felgate family since Sophia’s diagnosis in 2018. They have provided the Felgates with counselling, family fun days, massages/haircuts/manicures for Sophia and pizza nights.
The fundraiser has already raised almost £1,000. If you would like to donate to the cause you can do so on the JustGiving page.
