Harrogate ice rink to return again this Christmas

The company behind Harrogate’s Christmas ice rink has said it was “very happy” with how it went and plans to return for at least the next two years.

Events by Cynosure transformed Crescent Gardens into a festive treat, installing the ice rink and a host of fairground attractions, including a carousel.

The ice rink, which operated for a month, was one of the highlights of Harrogate’s Christmas offering, which also included a ferris wheel, a market and the Candy Cane Express free road train.

Harrogate Borough Council tourism organisation Destination Harrogate organised the activities in partnership with Events by Cynosure, Harrogate Business Improvement District and events company Market Place Europe as part of a bid to attract more Christmas visitors.

John Lowery, director of Events by Cynosure, told the Stray Ferret it had a three-year deal to operate the ice rink in Harrogate.

Mr Lowery said the ice rink attracted about 15,000 bookings and although he was pleased overall there was room for improvement.

He said the main improvement would be to extend the length of the 10-day market, which ended before mid-December:

“When the market ended it did go quieter. A lot of traders said the same thing. I’d like to see the market there right up until Christmas.


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Mr Lowery also said he wanted the Crescent Gardens site to include a Santa’s grotto and better bar facilities.

He said:

“Our intention is to make Harrogate a destination for people to go at Christmas so they spend money in town and restaurants.

“We’ve learned more about the site and the flow of people and how Harrogate works. Between Christmas and the new year was a lot quieter than I expected.”

Do you recognise any of these Harrogate kids on TV 47 years ago?

What are the best children’s toys and games, and are they worth the money?

Those are questions parents ask themselves every Christmas – but an old TV clip recently released from the BBC Archives provides some answers from Harrogate primary school pupils. 

The video was first broadcast on December 10, 1975, when schoolchildren from Bilton Grange County Primary School (as it was then) took over from the regular presenters of BBC Nationwide’s Consumer Unit, Valerie Singleton and Richard Stilgoe, to offer their expert opinions on the best children’s games to buy as Christmas presents. 

Archive footage from Bilton Grange Primary School, which was broadcast on BBC's Nationwide.

Archive footage from Bilton Grange Primary School, which was broadcast on BBC’s Nationwide.

Among the toys ranked by the retro reviewers were Mouse Trap, Monopoly, Snakes and Ladders, Haunted House, Baby Alive, Super Striker, Scalextric, Action Man, Frustration and Campaign.  

The schoolchildren will be in their late 50s by now, and many may well still live in the area. Are you one of them? Do you know someone who is? Let us know – we’d love to hear from some of them, nearly half a century on. Let us know by emailing contact@thestrayferret.co.uk. 

You can watch the video on the BBC website here.


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The Bishop of Ripon’s Christmas message of hope

In her Christmas Day message for the Stray Ferret, the Bishop of Ripon, the Rt Rev Dr Helen-Ann Hartley, reflects on a tough year for the country — but adds that we should be drawn by hope not fear.

A few days before Christmas, I picked up my new glasses. Acquiring varifocals has taken a bit of self-persuasion, as a good deal of my pride got in the way with various phrases-in-my-head associated with the march of time, and getting older.

Plus, I had heard various stories of people wandering about in a fog, and tripping up going downstairs. Too many obstacles in the way then became another phrase-in-the-head.

An Advent carol service in Ripon Cathedral at the end of November rather sealed the deal however, when I struggled to read the words in the service sheet, and realised I would have to do something about it before Christmas.

So, I took myself off to the opticians and after lots of reassurance took the plunge, and thus far I have to say my varifocals have transformed my perspective on all things near and far and everything in-between, and I haven’t tripped up going down the stairs, yet.

The cost however was another matter altogether: eye-watering is one way of describing it, and this seems a reasonable if not necessary starting point for thinking about Christmas, for looking back and looking ahead as I prepare to leave my role as Bishop of Ripon and become Bishop of Newcastle in the new year.

The Rt Rev Dr Helen-Ann Hartley will be leaving Ripon to become Bishop of Newcastle in the New Year.

Pandemic, cost of living, war, uncertainty (insert personal or family list here), a failing economy, strikes. Each one of us will have been impacted by all of these issues, for in many ways they are all inter-related.

In the latter part of this year, I waited anxiously by my phone to hear news of my father who thankfully has come through open-heart surgery and is on a slow road to recovery. I give thanks for the incredible skill of the medical team who cared for him, who work under such pressure day by day.

Perspective is everything when it comes to the Christmas message of God becoming one of us in a weak and vulnerable new-born child. Right there is the whole point of what I believe, and what I seek to do in my role as a Bishop.

It’s because of that narrative that I am drawn by hope and not driven by fear (even if I have to convince myself some days).

And yet it’s not down to me alone, definitely not!  I know that my own perspective has been enriched, challenged and illuminated by so many people and communities who don’t form part of the formal church structures that shape my daily life. Perhaps most of the all the running community: Ripon Runners, Fountains Abbey parkrun in particular.

It is here that I have felt most alive and encouraged: a reminder to me that in my own outward facing role finding the things that nurture and keep me active are vital to who I am and what I do. And I hope I have brought something of the light and peace of God to them too.

You can’t put a price on kindness and gratitude, and that I have received in abundance. Thanks be to God.

Happy Christmas everyone, and all the very best for 2023.


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Photo of the Week: Christmas across the district

This week we have a selection of photographs celebrating Christmas day across the Harrogate district.

Photographs by Kate Filippi and Brittany Thompson

 

Photographs by Helen Sunderland and Jenni Foley


Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.

Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.

Festive bin collection dates revealed in Harrogate district

Harrogate 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.

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.


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Photo of the Week: Harrogate Ferris Wheel

This week’s photograph was taken by Nick Payne, capturing the lights and movement on the Ferris Wheel during this year’s Christmas Fraye.

 

Nick Payne


Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.

Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.

Harrogate’s cracking Christmas rolls on with ice rink and Ferris wheel fun

This story is sponsored by Events by Cynosure.


Harrogate’s incredible Christmas offering is here to stay until the new year with plenty of festive fun to be had at the incredible Ferris wheel, ice rink, traditional carousel and more.

All of these showstopping attractions are new for Harrogate and will be here until January 3 – so now’s the time to get your skates on!

The giant, illuminated Ferris wheel is in a great location, right in the centre of town.

At its peak of 32-metres, the Ferris wheel offers spectacular views both in the day but also at night with the town centre dressed up for the festive season.

The Christmas Fayre wheel in Harrogate town centre.

The giant wheel is a great way to experience the town from above.

There’s no need to book ahead for the Ferris wheel so just turn up when you’re ready to experience Harrogate from above.

A true fairground feeling

The fairground feeling at Crescent Gardens is not to be missed either, especially at night when the festoon lighting switches on.

With a traditional carousel, ice rink, fairground rides for children and an aprés ski bar for adults – there’s certainly something at Crescent Gardens for everyone.

The traditional carousel looks the part.

Sessions at the ice rink are 60 minutes, so there’s plenty of time to find your feet and make the most of the experience.

It’s perfect for families, dates, catching up with friends, Christmas parties with a twist or those wanting to learn with the skate school.

John Lowery, Director of Events by Cynosure, said:

“We have been very pleased with the attendance from all over the country this Christmas.

“We are looking forward to seeing more visit us before we close on January 3, 2023. We are even open on Christmas Eve, Boxing Day, New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day so there are plenty of chances to enjoy this magical experience.

“This is the first year of a three year contract and we already have some amazing plans for 2023 Christmas.”


Book ahead for the ice rink and secure your timeslot by clicking or tapping here.

Christmas market cruise heading to Ripon

Ripon Scenic Cruises is set to host its second Christmas market on the city’s canal.

Victoria Whitehead organised the first, which was held in 2018, and the second which is set to be held on December 17 and 18 from 11am to 3pm.

Richard Willis, father of Victoria, said:

“We’ve got the boat sat there, we’ve got the space why not put on a Christmas Market and cruise?”

So far Victoria and Richard estimate they have sold over 40 tickets for each day of the market and they hope to expand next year.

The firm will also be providing a ‘winter warmer cruise’ with mince pies and mulled wine at £8.50 a ticket.


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The cruise will travel down the Ripon canal and can hold up to 12 people.

The market is expecting at least five different stalls from local businesses and live music.

Tickets for the cruise can be bought on the day or at the Cathedral View Cafe at 2 Bedern Bank, Ripon HG4 1BS.

Candlelit Christmas service to remember Harrogate war dead

More than 1,000 servicemen who died in the two World Wars are to be honoured at a candlelit Christmas remembrance event in Harrogate. 

Members of the public are invited to join the event, which will be held at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s (CWGC) site at Stonefall Cemetery on Sunday, December 18 at 3.30pm.  

Visitors will be provided with battery-operated tealights to place on the graves of the fallen, which will be followed by a short service of remembrance. 

Stonefall is one of the largest CWGC sites in the North of England and holds 1,013 Commonwealth casualties, 988 of them airmen who died during the Second World War, when Bomber Command bases were established across Yorkshire. 


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Two thirds of these are Canadian – including two 17-year-olds – and there are also graves of servicemen from the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and the Caribbean. Many of them died in the military wing of Harrogate General Hospital. 

Local resident Benji Walker, who conceived and organised the event, said:

“I feel it’s as important today as it was at the time to recognise the sacrifice of those who gave everything to serve this country. The Candlelit Christmas Remembrance is a chance for the local community to gather to remember the sacrifice of the hundreds of CWGC casualties buried at Stonefall, many of them thousands of miles from home.”  

Mr Walker, who has a son serving in the Yorkshire Regiment, will be using the event to raise money for the Commonwealth War Graves Foundation and Help for Heroes. Members of the public can sponsor a candle with the profits being split between Help for Heroes and the Commonwealth War Graves Foundation (CWGF).  

CWGC public engagement coordinator Elizabeth Smith said:

“We’re grateful to what Benji has inspired here, a chance for people from all over the world to pay their respects to the fallen at a unique site, and at a special time of year. This has now become an annual event and long may it continue.  

“The Air Force plot at Stonefall Cemetery is incredible and resembles the sites we care for overseas. At the end of the Second World War local people were encouraged to adopt the war graves of the Canadian servicemen and lay wreaths on behalf of their families at Christmas.”  

Those wishing to attend the service are advised to dress warmly, wear appropriate footwear, and bring torches. The meeting point is the war graves plot adjacent to Forest Lane. Parking is available in the cemetery car park off Forest Lane. 

Photo of the Week: Fountains Abbey at night
This week’s photograph was taken by John Shepherd, capturing the moon shining over Fountains Abbey at the Christmas illumination night.

 

John Shepherd

 


Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.

Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.