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Dog owners in the Harrogate district are being urged to keep their pets on leads by the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust following two attacks on sheep at nature reserves last week.
The trust looks after more than 100 nature reserves across Yorkshire, including sites in Burton Leonard, Staveley, Bishop Monkton, Ripon and Upper Dunsforth, near Boroughbridge.
At a reserve in Huddersfield, an attack from a dog left one of the trust’s Hebridean grazing sheep with deep bite wounds.
Meanwhile, at Kilnsea Wetlands in East Yorkshire, pregnant ewes were chased by dogs, angering the local grazier.
As well as posing risks to livestock, dogs have also been trampling rare plants and bird nests.
The majority of ground-nesting birds are in decline in the UK, including curlews, woodcocks and skylarks. If dogs scare birds away from their nests, they leave chicks at risk.

A Skylark, one of the vulnerable ground-nesting birds.
Increasing instances of dogs disturbing wildlife has led the charity to issue the plea for owners to keep dogs on leads.
Rachael Bice, Yorkshire Wildlife Trust’s chief executive said:;
“Dog walking is one of the best reasons to get outdoors, feel great and enjoy our beautiful countryside – and we thank every responsible dog owner who keeps their dog on a lead and encourages others to do the same.
“Wildlife is suffering huge declines and dogs in wild places can cause problems, especially when many species are breeding and resting close to the ground.”
Jenna Kiddie, head of canine behaviour at the charity Dogs Trust, added:
“Dogs [should be] kept on a short lead, and close to their owners, whenever livestock are nearby, within seeing, hearing or smelling distance or whenever their presence is likely to be expected.
“It is important to remember that chasing is normal dog behaviour, and that any dog is capable of chasing, irrelevant of breed, type, age or size.”
You can find more info about being a nature-friendly pet owner here.
Read More:
Pet crematorium opens today in Harrogate
A pet crematorium opened in Harrogate today.
The crematorium, run by Harrogate Borough Council, gives pet owners the chance to say farewell to their cats, dogs and small animals.
Prices start at £72 for small animals and from £85 for cats and from £115 for dogs.
The ashes will be placed in a scatter tube, which owners can collect, along with a memorial certificate.
The crematorium is located at Stonefall Cemetery and Crematorium on Wetherby Road.

The crematorium is at Stonefall on Wetherby Road.
Councillor Sam Gibbs, the council’s cabinet member for environment, waste reduction and recycling, said:
“Pets are like part of the family and they deserve an ending with dignity and respect, just like humans.
“The new pet crematorium will provide the most sympathetic setting for people to say goodbye to their pets.
“This service will also provide people, as well as veterinary surgeries, a local, trusted and reliable pet cremation service – operated by experts in bereavements.”
The Stray Ferret revealed last year the council was set to award a £40,000 contract to create a pet crematorium at Stonefall.
Further information on the facility is available here.

Inside the crematorium
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Why Fountains Abbey is pawfect for dogs

This story is sponsored by the National Trust.
Finding something to do at the weekend can be challenging, especially if you have dogs, but the National Trust team at Fountains Abbey say they’re on a mission to make it easy.
Under the National Trust’s Paw Print dog-friendliness scheme, the attraction has been named a three-paw site – the highest possible rating.
Jenni Shepherd, senior marketing and communications officer at the National Trust, said:
“We’re always getting comments about how welcoming we are to dogs at Fountains Abbey.
“The admissions team even has doggy treats on hand for the waggiest tails!”
Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal Park is a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site, and includes the ruins of the medieval monastery, the Georgian water garden and the deer park.
Where you lead, your dog can follow!
Visiting dog-walkers can see all the historic attractions up close, as well as following paths around the site and trails through surrounding woodland.
“When people see the amazing abbey ruins, they often think they can’t possibly take a dog there, but actually at Fountains, dogs can go pretty much everywhere their owners do,” said Jenni.
“We get a lot of tourists visiting from other areas of the country, where historic sites perhaps don’t welcome dogs so readily, and so they think they can’t bring their dogs here either.
“But Fountains Abbey is actually one of the best places to bring a dog.
“There are drinking stations and dog waste bins throughout, and there’s a wide range of pet products for sale in the Visitor Centre shop.
“There’s even dog-friendly ice-cream available at the Studley refreshment kiosk and in the Visitor Centre restaurant.
“Your dog can go everywhere you go. Dogs are even allowed in the deer park, as long as they’re kept on a short lead.”

Woodland walks are a favourite pastime among dog-owners visiting Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal.
Last month, the National Trust unveiled plans to upgrade its facilities at Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal.
A new visitor building will be built around the existing tearoom. There will be a fully accessible café, more toilets and a new admissions area, with all areas remaining dog-friendly. Jenni added:
“Yorkshire as a destination is a dog-lovers’ paradise, and Fountains Abbey really stands out as one of the best places here to take your dog.
“There’s so much to do and see here, you can stay all day – and your dog never has to leave your side.”
Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal are a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Find out more about visiting – with or without dogs – here.
Stray Views: My dog was banned from church — this is wrong!
Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
My dog was banned from church – this is wrong
My gorgeous bit of fur, a well behaved six-year-old French bulldog, was asked to leave a well known church in Harrogate this afternoon. She could have stayed if she was an assistance/ guide dog on a lead and wearing a jacket. ‘Ordinary’ dogs are not allowed as their allergens may cause suffering to churchgoers. Do the leads and jackets stop allergens… no!
Belle has been visiting the sessions most weeks this year, to no known detriment to the church community. Has there been an anaphylactic reaction to a person during or after our sessions? Probably not.
Belle is adored by the churchgoers. They love giving her treats, petting and interacting with her. Pat-a-dog activities are a welcome therapy with the elderly and dementia sufferers. As a nurse for over 30 years, and having been a matron/ manager of care homes, I have seen the happiness this interaction brings.
Are dogs not God’s creation like us? Is a house of God not a sanctuary and place of peace? Are all of God’s creatures not welcome?
Although Belle is not officially a therapy dog, she helps me overcome anxiety/panic attacks and kept my mental health and wellbeing from spiralling into a black hole during the covid crisis. She continues to support me and bring joy.
Chrissy Richardson, Scotton
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- ‘Badly let down’ Woodfield school closure confirmed
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Politics of Woodfield school closure should not be forgotten
As branch secretary of the National Education Union, it is with great sadness that I have watched Woodfield Community Primary School, in the Bilton area of Harrogate, move towards closure.
The community of Bilton deserves a thriving primary school and over the course of the past decade the school has undergone several traumatic events that led to a lack of parental confidence. Rather than working with the community to help the school re-establish its reputation, it seems that far too many agencies involved have sought to sweep things under the carpet and not give the school staff and the local community the support they deserved to keep the school functioning.
I read with interest Cllr Paul Haslam’s comments in which he argues that the school should not be closing, due to the growth in population in Harrogate. I agree with Cllr Haslam about the need to keep Woodfield school open, but I do take issue with the fact that it is the Tory party, a party he represents, whose policy of forcing schools to become academies that has been the final death knell for the school.
The behaviour of the Department for Education is akin to the school bully who get their own way by any means necessary. Every member of the Tory party, from the Prime Minister to the Andrew Jones MP, to ward councillors are culpable in the decimation of our education system and schools such as Woodfield pay the heavy price for their neo-liberal ideology.
Over the past months the NEU has run a campaign to save Woodfield School. A campaign to which Tory councillors were happy to say they supported in words but then failed to back it up in gestures. When children are having to travel increased distances and crossing over catchment area borders to get the education they deserve I hope those local councillors, and the local MP, hang their heads in shame.
Mostly, I feel for the future generations of children in Bilton who will not be able to attend what was, not so long ago, a thriving, caring and wonderful educational setting.
Gary McVeigh-Kaye
A new independent pet food shop is to open on Cold Bath Road in Harrogate this month.
HG Pets is taking the space previously occupied by the Refilling Station, which closed in August this year after three years of trading.
The new store will offer a full range of traditional dog and cat dry foods and a couple of ranges of raw food.
There’ll also be a range of toys, beds, leads and collars — plus flea and tic treatments and shampoos.
Owner Jon Bradley told the Stray Ferret:
“I’ve been looking for premises to set up either a pet shop or garden centre for 20 years but never had the opportunity financially to do it.
“I recently left the company I was working with and was able to set this up and do something I wanted to do.”
Mr Bradley, who owns a Dalmatian and a Labrador, thinks there is a market for higher quality dog food in Harrogate — a town of dog lovers:
“I think the main thing is that we are independent and that we’ll offer quality and value.
“We’re going to offer ranges that are different to the national pet retailers such as raw food and offer unique products which are better quality. They’re value for money as they last a lot longer.
“I’ve lived in Harrogate for nearly 20 years – my wife was brought up here and we know that Harrogate is a dog loving town and people are willing to spend on their dogs as long as they get quality.
“I think there is space for us in the independent dog retail and food market Some of the offer pet stores offer different products– half of our store will devoted to feeding.”
HG Pets will also offer a delivery and subscription service. The store is set to open on October 29.

The new store’s logo
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Consultation ends today on no-dogs area in Knaresborough park
A consultation into a no-dogs area in a Knaresborough park is set to end today.
Harrogate Borough Council trialled a fenced off area next to the entrance in Jacob Smith Park and asked dog walkers not to go into the space.
It comes after the council received complaints about dogs being let off leads and causing anxiety and injury to children playing in the park.
The 30 acres of parkland was bequeathed to the community of Knaresborough by Winifred Jacob Smith, following her death in 2003.
A public survey into the trial is set to end today.
The borough council said it will then consider a solution to the problem.
It said:
“Following discussions with the trustees of Jacob Smith Park, Friends of Jacob Smith Park, local councillors and users of the park, we have erected a small area of cut grass and temporary fencing to the left of the park entrance to create a dog free space for children to play, and people to have picnics, etc.
“We are asking dog walkers not to take dogs within the fenced area.
“The area is small, taking up less than three per cent of the park’s area so will not make an appreciable difference to the space available for dog walkers and others using the park.”
You can fill in the survey on the trial here. The consultation will close at the end of today.
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Harrogate man banned from keeping animals after cruelty case
A Harrogate man has been disqualified from owning pets for five years after being found guilty of neglecting two dogs.
Charlie Nelson, 28, of Woodfield View, was found to be in breach of the Animal Welfare Act at York Magistrates Court yesterday.
The court heard Nelson did not take reasonable steps to look after a mastiff called Rocco and a lurcher called Smudge at High Street, Harrogate, on March 18 last year.
Court documents reveal he was banned from keeping animals “to ensure no animals suffer at the hands of the defendant during this period”.
They also show an order was made under section 33 of the Animal Welfare Act 2006 depriving him of ownership of a dog and for its disposal.
Nelson was also ordered to pay costs of £200 and a surcharge of £95 to fund victims’ services.
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- Malnourished dogs found in Harrogate flat covered in faeces and urine
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North Yorkshire Police issued warrants in July for the arrest of Nelson and his brother Robbie Nelson after they failed to turn up in court to face animal cruelty charges.
Robbie Nelson, 24, of Woodfield View, was subsequently banned from keeping animals for five years.
The RSPCA said Rocco and Smudge were malnourished and living in a flat covered in faeces and with carpets soaked in urine.

An RSPCA picture of the flat where the brothers kept dogs.
Knaresborough café holds first dog tea party
A Knaresborough café has played host to its first dog tea party, with both canines and owners getting sweet treats.
Scarlett’s tea room welcomed 25 white and fluffy Coton de Tulears.
The dogs went for a walk around the town with their owners before heading to the tea room to enjoy cake for humans and treats and chews for the dogs.
Sarah Williams, who runs Scarlett’s, called the event “hugely fun.”

The dogs getting treats at the tearoom (photo: Sarah Williams)
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The dogs with their owners (photo: Sarah Williams)
The Coton de Tulear is a small dog which originates from Madagascar.
They are known to be affectionate and playful, and are closely related to the Bichon Frise and Maltese breeds.
The dog owners who came to Knaresborough on Sunday are members of a Facebook group that occasionally meets up to walk their dogs together.
Ms Williams heard about the group through Hayley Goddard, who also works at the café, and said “why don’t you come to Knaresborough.”

25 dogs were at the event with their owners (photos: Sarah Williams)
According to Ms Williams, Scarlett’s team room has long proved popular with dogs. She said:
“We’ve got so many dogs that come into the tearoom. Some of them have to coax their owners in… And the dogs know that they can come get a treat. So as soon as they’re [nearby], they’re in here dragging their owners.”
Thankfully, she added, all the dogs were well behaved.

The dogs first went for a walk around Knaresborough (photo: Sarah Williams)
The RSPCA has revealed that two malnourished dogs rescued in Harrogate were living in a flat covered in faeces and with carpets soaked in urine.
Robbie Nelson, 24, of Woodfield View, was banned from keeping animals for five years last week.
The animal charity has revealed the mastiff called Rocco and the lurcher named Smudge were so underweight their ribs were protruding when RSPCA inspector Tom Hutton was called to a flat in High Street, Harrogate, on March 18 last year.
The inspector, who was called out by police executing a search warrant in relation to another matter, needed to squeeze through the living room door to reach the dogs because of the large amount of clutter, scrap bikes and household waste piled up.

The flat was full of clutter.
Areas of the flat were covered in faeces and the carpets were soaked in urine.
Nelson refused to sign over the dogs to the RSPCA so the animals were seized by the police.
They were taken to a vet for treatment and an examination showed Rocco had a body condition score of one out of nine, which is classed as a state of emaciation.

Rocco is back in good health after being emaciated.
The veterinary surgeon said in her witness statement:
“He (Rocco) weighed just 24.3kg and I would estimate a healthy weight would have been nearer 36kg,”
“The lurcher (Smudge) was also very thin. He weighed 17kg and his body condition score was two out of nine. I estimate a healthy weight for him would have been 23kg.”
The vet concluded that both dogs were malnourished and the “state of their accommodation had compromised their health”.

Robbie Nelson was banned from keeping animals for five years last week.
In mitigation, the court was told the defendant suffered from mental health issues and he felt his brother, Charlie Nelson, should have taken responsibility for the dogs as he was their “true owner”.

Smudge is waiting to be rehomed.
At an earlier hearing, a charge of failing to ensure the needs of the two dogs were met was also proven in absence against Charlie Nelson, 30, also of Woodfield View, Harrogate.
He has yet to be sentenced and a warrant remains outstanding for his arrest.
Read more:
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The RSPCA said in a statement that both Rocco and Smudge had “returned to good health and remain in the care of the RSPCA”. They will be rehomed when the outstanding court matter is settled.
After the hearing, inspector Hutton said:
“Both these dogs were skinny and living in awful conditions. The house was full of rubbish and dog faeces.
“We thank North Yorkshire Police for alerting us to the situation the dogs were in, which means we will be able to find them new homes where they are loved and cared for.”
Police to refer man who left four dogs in hot car to RSPCA
North Yorkshire Police has said it will refer the owner of four dogs who were left inside a baking hot car to the RSCPA.
The Stray Ferret reported yesterday that bystanders at Oak Beck Retail Park off Skipton Road had to smash a Land Rover Discovery window to free the dogs.
They had been trapped for over half an hour without even a window open.
Fortunately, there were vets working at the nearby Vets4Pets, which is inside Pets At Home.
The Labradors were given treatment and after a health check that showed they were OK, were handed back to the owner.
But that might not be the end of the matter. A North Yorkshire Police spokesperson has confirmed that an officer spoke to the male owner and will refer the incident to the RSPCA.
A spokesperson said:
“Members of the public witnessed the dogs being left unattended with the windows up and seemingly without air conditioning for around 30 minutes.
“One of them smashed a window on the vehicle and the dogs were taken into the care of a vet.
“Police spoke to the owner of the dogs and are due to report him to the RSPCA.”
Read more:
- Four dogs rescued from hot car in Harrogate given back to owner
- Bystanders smash car window to rescue four dogs in Harrogate
What powers does the RSPCA have?
It is not illegal to leave a dog in a hot car but owners are legally responsible for their pets’ health and welfare.
If a dog becomes ill or dies in a hot car, the owner could be charged with animal cruelty under the Animal Welfare Act 2006. This could lead to a prison sentence and/or a fine.
The charity has no legal enforcement powers or authority in its own right, so all prosecutions are brought via independent solicitors acting for the RSPCA.
The charity runs a regular ‘dogs die in hot cars’ campaign that warns motorists of the dangers of leaving a dog inside a car during hot weather.
A spokesperson said:
“Despite our very clear message each year, some people still continue to leave their dogs in hot cars thinking there is no risk, and many more take their dogs out for walks in hot temperatures when pavements are red hot.
“It’s so important to remember not to leave any animal in any vehicle or caravan, or in a conservatory or outbuilding, where temperatures can quickly rise, even when it doesn’t feel that warm outside.”