Two students from Harrogate have left their hall of residence in Sheffield and returned home to protect their mental health from the impact of isolation.
Alex Hamshaw and his girlfriend, both 18, are first year students at Sheffield Hallam University.
Alex’s girlfriend had to isolate for two weeks at the start of term when a flatmate not following covid guidelines came into contact with someone that had tested positive.
Both have struggled with the impact that following covid guidelines has had on their ability to make new friends, and decided to leave after three weeks, before Sheffield moved into tier three restrictions.
Speaking about why they left Sheffield, Alex said:
“We decided to come home after my girlfriend finished isolating, as if that had happened again for her or for me, it would have really negatively impacted our mental wellbeing. Coming home means that we were in a different tier to Sheffield, we could go out and see friends and see each other, and that was better for our general wellbeing than being in Sheffield.”
They’re not planning to move back to university until case numbers decrease, with the expectation that this won’t happen until after Christmas.
Despite moving home, they are still paying rent for their Sheffield accommodation and Alex estimates that he will have lost about £1500 by the time that he returns.
Read More:
- North Yorkshire could be placed in tier two this week
- Police drugs bust near Harrogate’s Valley Gardens
While at home, the pair have decided to set up their own online business, Personal Paws Co, selling customisable dog collars and leads out of Paracord, a lightweight nylon rope originally used in the suspension lines of parachutes.

Alex’s dog Molly, modelling a collar.
With hopes to sell 500 collars or leads by Christmas, the teenagers are also hoping to do some good with their profits. Up until the 25th December, Personal Paws Co will donate 5% of its revenue to the Harrogate District foodbank.
Alex said:
“As we approach winter and it gets colder, it is even more challenging for children at this time of year, and so we have decided to donate 5% of all sales to Harrogate foodbank so that more children can enjoy a free meal as days get shorter and nights get longer. In our opinion, it’s the little things that help.
“We choose to start the business because we both have an interest in dogs and we wanted to create a product which was durable, comfortable and customisable in size and length which all dogs and dog owners could use. The profits not given to the food bank are going to be saved as a way to financially support us after graduating from uni.”
Do you have a similar story to tell us or are worried for your son and daughter isolated at University? Get in touch on contact@thestrayferret.co.uk
Harrogate district suffers record daily covid increaseEighty-three people in the Harrogate district have tested positive for coronavirus in the last 24 hours, according to the latest daily figures by Public Health England.
It is the largest daily increase in the district since the pandemic began, beating the 63 infections recorded on October 20.
Today’s figure brings the total number of infections in the district since the start of the pandemic to 2,106.
Speculation is rising that North Yorkshire will enter tier two this week amid the rising number of cases.
The Harrogate district currently has a seven-day rolling average of 203 positive cases per 100,000 people, which despite rising sharply is nevertheless below the England national average of 220.
Read more:
- First covid death at Harrogate hospital in three weeks
- Announcement on re-opening Harrogate district care homes imminent
According to government figures, the R rate for the district is 1.3.
Harrogate central, Harrogate west and Pannal, Boroughbridge and Marton-cum-Grafton and Killinghall and Hampsthwaite have experienced the highest number of infections in the district in the last seven days.
Ripon has experienced the lowest number.
Harrogate District Hospital has 12 coronavirus patients – three of whom are in intensive care.
A further 59 covid cases confirmed across Harrogate district
Another 59 new cases of coronavirus have been confirmed in the Harrogate district today.
It brings the total number of people in the district confirmed to have the virus to 1,989 since the start of the pandemic.
Today’s figures also show there have been no further deaths at Harrogate District Hospital, with the total number of covid-related fatalities there still standing at 84.
Across Yorkshire and the Humber, 14 deaths were confirmed today, out of a total of 76 across England. The region had 2,380 positive covid tests confirmed today, bringing the total in the pandemic to 108,580.
Read more:
- Harrogate coronavirus testing site opens with 57 appointments
- Harrogate Nightingale hospital put on standby
Harrogate district restaurants extend discount meals into November
The government’s Eat Out to Help Out scheme may have ended but some restaurants in the Harrogate district have announced they will still be offering their own versions of the initiative in November.
The Eat Out scheme offered discounted dining on Mondays to Wednesdays during August.
It proved so popular that months later, some restaurants are continuing to provide cut price deals.
La Feria, on Cold Bath Road, is offering a 50% discount on food up to £10 from Monday to Wednesday until the end of November.
With 25 staff, Jez Verity, the director, was keen to support his staff when the furlough scheme ended this month.
Thanks to the ongoing discount, the restaurant has had more than 100 people in every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
Mr Verity said:
“It was a big, big success in August, I think all businesses in Harrogate had significantly benefited on those three days.
“We decided to carry it on in September and see what happened. The customers really embraced it, they knew what it was and it was easy to understand.
“It’s also a way for us to say a thank you to customers for supporting us, and really give something back to them.”
Read more:
- Harrogate shops raise money with ‘Giraffle’ for food bank
- Stray Foodie: Grantham Arms, Boroughbridge
Other restaurants offering similar deals are All Bar One, which is offering £10 off food with the download of their app until 12th November, and the Queens Head Inn at Kettlesing, which is extending their discount of 50% off food from Monday to Wednesday until the end of next month.
West Park and Al Bivio are also looking to encourage business on quieter days of the weeks, offering half price vouchers through The Stray Ferret.
Let us know if your restaurant is running a similar promotion in November and we will add your details to this article.
Discussions ‘ongoing’ over moving North Yorkshire into tier twoDiscussions are ongoing over whether to move North Yorkshire into tier two of the local lockdown restrictions.
Dr Lincoln Sargeant, director of public health for North Yorkshire, said today that although the county’s infection rate was low compared with its neighbours, it was still influenced by what goes on in surrounding areas.
Dr Sargeant told a press briefing of the North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum, which is a partnership of organisations that respond to emergencies:
“We have to consider that North Yorkshire is surrounded by areas that are already in higher tiers or moving in that direction.
“We have to consider that although our rates have thankfully remained lower than most of our neighbours, we will probably still be part of discussions that will take in what is happening with our neighbours.
“That will probably colour how the discussions about further interventions might occur. We need to be mindful of that.
“We have to balance what is needed to control infections against the considerations from our business leaders in terms of what impact restrictions might have on the hospitality sector in particular.”
North Yorkshire currently sits in tier one, but is surrounded by tier two areas including York and West Yorkshire.
A move into tier two would ban gatherings with other households indoors.
Dr Sargeant said public health bosses in North Yorkshire and elsewhere in the county were in “ongoing discussions” with government about what tier the wider area, which would also include East Riding of Yorkshire, York, Hull, North East and North Lincolnshire should be in.
However, officials said any decision on moving the region up a tier would be made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care.
Read more:
Dr Sargeant added that, if the county did change tier, there was a lack of clarity on how an area could move back down.
He added:
“If and when North Yorkshire were to move into tier two, it would be important for us to understand what would be the benchmarks and indicators that would signal that we have been successful in the various measures and step back down into tier one restrictions.”
Dan Jarvis, Mayor of Sheffield City region, confirmed this morning that a deal had been agreed with government to place South Yorkshire into tier three.
The movement of areas into tiers has raised concern over people travelling between different level of restrictions.
Superintendent Mike Walker, gold commander for covid response at North Yorkshire Police, said, while the force could not enforce limits on travel, people should follow the tier guidance.
He added:
Harrogate Nightingale ‘could open with five days notice’“But for the public of North Yorkshire and the City of York who are worried what I can say is that officers will be patrolling, they will be visible and they will absolutely be enforcing face coverings and the rule of six as they have been doing throughout the pandemic.”
The Harrogate Nightingale hospital will be ready to take patients at five days notice by the end of the week, according to its medical director.
Dr Yvette Oade said it was “hard to predict” when the hospital, which was set-up at a cost of £27m to cater for covid patients in Yorkshire and the Humber, might be needed.
But she said people should be “very concerned” because the infection rate was rising rapidly across the region and hospital admissions were increasing.
The government said last week the Harrogate Nightingale was being put on standby.
Speaking on BBC Look North last night, Dr Oade described the hospital as “an insurance policy” that would be required if hospitals in the region reached maximum capacity. She added:
“You only draw on your insurance policies when things have not worked to plan.
“Right now the hospital isn’t needed, our colleagues are doing a great job around the region.
“People should be very concerned. Infection rates in Yorkshire and the Humber are one of the highest in the country. We’ve seen hospital admissions rising quickly.
“By the end of this week we will be ready to open to patients if given five days notice.
“Right now the hospital isn’t needed. It’s hard for me to predict when this hospital might be needed. The important thing is if we are needed then we will be ready.”
Read more:
- Exclusive: Harrogate Nightingale hospital unable to open safely
- Harrogate Nightingale hospital put on standby
Last week Lord Newby, the Ripon-based Liberal Democrat leader in the House of Lords suggested the hospital might not be able to open fully because it “simply does not have the staff available to allow it to operate safely”.
Asked about staffing, Dr Oade said the Harrogate Nightingale would need staff from other NHS organisations.
She added:
Another 39 covid cases in Harrogate district“If we get to the stage where we need the Nightingale hospitals it’s likely that because our acute trust will be so full that some of those procedures that they are currently doing will need to be halted.”
A further 39 people have tested positive for covid-19 in the Harrogate district since yesterday.
It brings the total number of cases with positive tests in the district to 1,637 since the start of the outbreak.
Read more:
- Permanent covid testing site to open in Harrogate next week
- Police consider ‘covid cars’ as part of enforcement
Health Secretary Matt Hancock told the House of Commons this week the government would consider a district-by-district approach to its new tier system.
Meanwhile, Dr Lincoln Sargeant, director of public health for North Yorkshire, said the main cause of spread of coronavirus in the county was between households.
He said he supported the new tier system as it would help to tackle the spread in the county.
Forty new covid cases confirmed in Harrogate districtA further 40 people have tested positive for covid-19 in the Harrogate district since yesterday.
It brings the total number of cases with positive tests in the district to 1,598 since the start of the outbreak.
There have been no deaths of patients with coronavirus at Harrogate District Hospital since September 29, with the total during the pandemic standing at 83.
One further person was this week reported to have died in a care home in the district after being diagnosed with the virus.
Read more:
- Permanent covid testing site to open in Harrogate next week
- Police consider ‘covid cars’ as part of enforcement
The latest statistics show Harrogate has the highest rate of infections in the seven districts in North Yorkshire.
Latest weekly figures showed 154 cases per 100,000 people in the district. This compares with 151 in Selby, 147 in Craven and 138 in Hambleton. Richmondshire recorded 104, Scarborough had 94 and Ryedale 89.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock told the House of Commons this week the government would consider a district-by-district approach to its new tier system.
Today, the government announced Lancashire would be placed in the highest tier of restrictions – but remains in dispute with the leaders of Greater Manchester over introducing further limitations there.
Dr Lincoln Sargeant, director of public health for North Yorkshire, said the main cause of spread of coronavirus in the county was between households.
He said he supported the new tier system as it would help to tackle the spread in the county, but said there were “very few instances” of infection in hospitality.
Care home visit scheme branded ‘placatory’ by dementia patient’s daughterA Harrogate woman campaigning for care home visits to be allowed said she does not see a government pilot scheme as a significant step forward.
Speaking to MPs this week, care minister Helen Whately said a pilot scheme to give relatives ‘key worker status’ – testing them for covid and allowing them to visit care homes – is being planned.
However, Judy Bass, whose 99-year-old father lives in a Harrogate care home, said more urgent progress needs to be made across the country for the sake of residents’ well-being.
“I don’t think it’s particularly a step forward. I think it’s placatory, because they have known about this for so long. It just needs to be put in place.
“Piloting it – I don’t even know how that would operate or if it would have any effect. They just need to put it in place. Relatives need to be given key worker status and tested and allowed to visit.”
Ms Bass also questioned whether the project would even be possible, given the struggle to deliver testing around the country.
Last month, introducing a ban on visitors across the county throughout October, North Yorkshire County Council’s head of health and adult services, Richard Webb, said although he was in favour of testing relatives to allow them to visit, the lack of tests available made that “unrealistic”.
Read more:
- Task group meets to discuss care home visits
- North Yorkshire districts could be placed in different covid tiers
Ms Bass and her brother are being allowed to visit their father this week for the first time – but only to see him through a window. As he has dementia, she is concerned the visit will distress him or, even worse, that he will not recognise his children.
“We will try and see how he copes with it, but he might not understand what’s going on. He might not know who I am, he might be exhausted by the whole thing. I go with trepidation.”
This week, care homes have reacted strongly to the suggestion that they could be asked to take in patients from hospitals who have tested positive for covid. Some councils have approached care homes to ask them to provide separate space for people recovering from the virus after being discharged, away from other residents.
Sam Monaghan, the chief executive of MHA, which runs care homes across the country including Berwick Grange in Harrogate, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme he was “highly concerned” about people with the virus being brought into close contact with vulnerable communities. Speaking about the logistics of accommodating them separately, he added:
“Unless you are talking about care home providers who have got buildings that aren’t yet occupied, it will be moving people out of their home, their room that they have got, if you are trying to cohort part of the home.
“You would be having to separate your staff group into those who are working with people without covid and those who are working with covid, and what the arrangements and protections for those staff at the heightened level of risk would be.
“And then there is the risk of transmission within that geographic space, even if you managed to create an artificial barrier between the two.”
For Ms Bass, who has not seen her father since March, introducing covid patients to a care home while still preventing relatives who have tested negative for the virus from visiting, is beyond comprehension.
She told the Stray Ferret action needs to be taken quickly for the sake of residents who may not have long left to live and whose families are missing vital time with their loved ones.
Exclusive: Harrogate Nightingale hospital “unable to open safely”“It’s going to be a hard enough winter for everybody, but to make things harder for us and our relatives is so unfair. We speak as often as we can, but conversation is very limited. He is stable, but it’s very difficult for me to tell how he is mentally without sitting with him and being with him to get those vibes.
“I don’t think we have seen a particular mental deterioration, but it’s just he shouldn’t be in that situation and we shouldn’t either.
“Ours is very minimal compared to a lot of people, but if my father has deteriorated and doesn’t know who we are, we’ve lost that little window of time with him that we had.”
A peer has expressed concerns the Harrogate Nightingale hospital will not open because it “simply does not have the staff available to allow it to operate safely”.
The government said this week the hospital was on standby to receive covid patients.
But Lord Newby, the Liberal Democrat leader in the House of Lords, told the Lords yesterday:
“It is widely believed in Yorkshire that, as far as the Nightingale hospital in Harrogate is concerned, this will not happen because the hospital simply does not have the staff available to allow it to operate safely.”
Lord Newby, who lives in Ripon, asked Baroness Evans of Bowes Park, the Conservative leader of the House of Lords, if she could “assure the House that this is not the case”.

Baroness Evans replied that the hospital was already being used for CT scans — which did not reassure Lord Newby.
Speaking today to the Stray Ferret, he said:
“I raised the issue yesterday because I had heard from several NHS sources that the Nightingale hospital had neither the equipment nor more importantly the staff to open fully.
“I was not at all reassured by Baroness Evans’ response. She said that the Harrogate Nightingale was currently being used for CT scans and implied that it was on standby to open for covid cases.
“She explicitly refused to answer my specific question about whether the hospital had the staffing levels which would allow it to open safely for covid patients.”
Read more:
Lord Newby said he doubted NHS England would want to admit there would be real difficulties getting the Harrogate hospital working with covid patients on any scale.
An NHS England spokesperson for the hospital said:
“As part of our comprehensive activation plans we have developed a model that can be scaled up as and when additional critical care beds are required in the region.
“This ensures that the right skill mix of staff will be available from NHS trusts in the region, and via NHS Professionals and through direct recruitment if required.”
