Masham Parish Council is discussing a number of ways to prevent further flooding.
Masham was hit by floods in February 2020 but since then has had several warnings as water levels rose in Swinney Beck. The continuing problem has forced the council to review the issue at each of its monthly meetings.
The council’s emergency committee aims to ensure a plan is in place if water levels rise and to work with the Environment Agency and local county and borough councils to put in preventative measures.
One of the affected areas from last year’s floods was Red Lane. It has a number of bridges and wall crossings over the beck which can slow down the clearance of water.
The council is currently talking to local landowners to see what can be done to improve this.
Valerie Broadley, the lead councillor for the council’s emergency planning committee said:
“We are exploring this with the owners to see if there is anything to do to raise the water clearance. This would be a short term solution but it is still being discussed.
“We are hopeful something could be done fairly quickly.”
Read more:
- A woman from Pannal speaks of her flooding ordeal following Storm Bella.
- Neighbours in Pateley Bridge speak of the year they all came together during flooding and the pandemic.
The environment agency has also suggested using heather baskets further up-stream to prevent the beck over-flowing into the town. The basket weaving technique has been used across the country to help control the flow of water.
Cllr Broadley has been researching the original course of the beck which is thought to have been diverted in the 1800s. Further exploration would need to be carried out to see if there is a way to re-route the beck to its original course in an attempt to prevent further flooding in Masham.
The council said this is a long term prevention method that could cost thousands and take years to complete.
Pateley’s Harefield Hall determined to survive a year of blowsElaine Little was looking forward with optimism to 2020, which was shaping up to be a record year for Harefield Hall.
The four-star country guest house in Pateley Bridge, with its restaurant, bar, 14 en-suite rooms and bunk room for groups of cyclists and other travellers, had record bookings.
Then came covid and the first lockdown in March, which proved to be just the precursor to nine months of stop-start misery for the hall, which once belonged to the Archbishop of York.
Ms Little, the director of the hall, told the Stray Ferret:
“Just as we prepared to come out of the first lockdown and were getting ready for re-opening, a cloudburst on 28 June devastated the building.
“The rainstorm was so severe that the gutters and fall pipes were overwhelmed and the ingress of water damaged ceilings, furniture and carpets.”
The insurance claim is still to be resolved, as the pandemic has delayed the settlement processes.
The damage caused in June meant the hall could not reopen in July. Accommodation and restaurant bookings were lost, as were bar takings.

Harefield Hall once belonged to the Archbishop of York.
The premises remained closed until mid-October, then within a fortnight of reopening the second lockdown in November, effectively wiped out the pre-Christmas trade.
Now the third lockdown has dealt another huge body blow. Ms Little said:
“We’ve gone from crisis to crisis, unable to make any money to cover our overhead costs and trying to survive on a small discretionary grant and a bounce-back loan, that will need to be repaid.
“It’s so ironic, because at the beginning of 2020 we had record bookings – more than 50 per cent up on our previous best year.”
In spite of all this, Ms Little is determined that a rainstorm and three lockdowns will not blow her and her remaining team of four off-course.
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She said:
“In business, you must remain positive and focused and we are determined to turn things around because we have total belief in what we are doing here.
“We hope a similar change of fortune is not far away for other small businesses in the Pateley Bridge area – some of whom are among our suppliers.”
Amid the countless calls to insurers and suppliers, Ms Little is looking to the future.
She sees potential in attracting more cyclists who are seeking hospitality and an overnight stay at Harefield, with its woodland and riverside setting.
Nature lovers, looking for the abundant variety of birds that are attracted to Nidderdale’s natural environment, also offer business opportunities, as does the opening later this year of a self-catering holiday cottage within Harefield’s grounds.
Pannal woman speaks of her Storm Bella flooding ordealA woman from Pannal has spoken of her flooding ordeal last night when Storm Bella wreaked havoc.
Suzanne Walker, who lives alone in a basement apartment on Leeds Road, had to call North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service when water levels rose to her bedroom window.
It was the second time in three months she has had to call the fire service to pump water away from her rear window and a meter cupboard.
Fortunately there was no major damage but the proximity of the water to an electric switchboard, along with the fact that this has happened before, has left her extremely anxious.
Ms Walker, who is a director of the apartment block management company, Fieldhurst Management Company, dialled 999 shortly after midnight when she noticed the water level rising. She said:
“It’s extremely annoying and frustrating, not to mention stressful, watching dirty water rise to such a level that you know your bed is on the other side of the wall, not to mention electrics too.”
The fire crew arrived to pump the water away. Water had entered the external meter cupboard, which houses the meters of all seven of the apartments in the block.

Similar high water levels were seen on October 3. Photograph: Suzanne Walker.
Since the first flooding incident after heavy rain on October 3, Ms Walker has contacted several organisations to try to find out where the water is coming from. It is thought the water is jetting out of pipes near to the apartment.
She added:
“No one is taking responsibility for the pipes or the land where the jetting company are telling me they think the issue is.
“It makes you anxious and worried every time it rains as we don’t know how high it would reach.
“I’ve lived in Pannal over 30 years and at this property for the last 10 years and I’ve never experienced anything like this before.”
Read more:
- Pateley Bridge residents tell us how they had to come together during the February floods.
- Hunsingore receives a red alert for flooding today.
Ms Walker said she intends to contact Andrew Jones, MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, as well as councillors at North Yorkshire County Council and Pannal and Burn Bridge Parish Council seeking help.
Flood warnings remain in place on the River Nidd and River Ure. The government’s flood information service is giving updates on its website.
My Year: From floods to pandemic, Pateley Bridge shop team pitches inThe Chandler family took over the Spar Shop in Pateley Bridge in 2016 and as 2021 approaches, they hope to put a year of floods and pandemic behind them. Lee Chandler tells their story for the Stray Ferret.
On Valentine’s Day, people were buying wine and chocolates for a romantic night in, but the following morning Storm Dennis hammered the UK and Nidderdale.
Over three days, we went from a relatively quiet start to 2020, into the teeth of gales, deep waters and floods.
As the River Nidd rose to its highest recorded levels and shops and businesses in Pateley Bridge were flooded, who could have known this was just the precursor of worse to come?
Back in February, many members of the community pulled together to save the High Street – among them, James Clarkson, Hillary and Roger Jefferson (even though Roger was recovering from heart surgery), County Councillor Stan Lumley, Aaron Dunn, Chris Hawkesworth and many more.
Just as we completed the clean-up and, like the town’s other retailers, started putting out the stock for Mother’s Day and Easter, we were back in crisis.
A virus that only medical experts and scientists had heard of came sweeping across the world. Nobody was safe.
While Nidderdale has not suffered the same level of infections and deaths as other parts of the Harrogate district, the lockdowns from March to June and November to early December temporarily closed the majority of businesses in the town.
However, with people isolating in their homes in Nidderdale and the Washburn Valley, we were among the essential retailers allowed to remain open and found our shop transformed into a kind of distribution hub.
Countless boxes and bags containing food and drink, prescriptions, pet supplies, books and DVDs were assembled for delivery by an army of more than 60 volunteers coordinated by Nidderdale Plus with fabulous assistance from the Rev Darryl Hall.
More than 90 deliveries went out on some days – both near and far, including urgent supplies that went up Greenhow Hill by bicycle with trailer ridden by Heather Tuffs, an instructor from Bewerley Park Outdoor Learning Centre – itself in lockdown.
We also had the ‘buddy scheme’ checking on the vulnerable and set up a food bank donation point which remains to this day. It is run by Bewerley Park and Nidderdale Plus.
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Staff at Spar and other shops that remained open worked extremely long hours, in a collaborative community effort – that also saw us, later in the year, clubbing together to support the town’s Christmas lights appeal.
With our late-night Christmas shopping event another casualty of covid-19, the extended lights have brought us some cheer and we will have them for years to come.
In among all this, we took over the local bakery just across the road, which had closed before the first lockdown – some might call us gluttons for punishment!
It has been a challenging year, but we kept our heads above water, maintained our sense of humour and hope to come out of it stronger.
Flooding expected in Hunsingore as red alert issuedA red flooding alert has been issued for the River Nidd at Hunsingore and residents have been told to activate their flood defences.
The government’s flood information service issued a warning at 9.27am this morning as Storm Bella ramps up.
The red alert says “flooding is expected – immediate action is required”.
According to the government site the water level is currently 1.45m but it is expected to rise to 1.8 this morning. The River Nidd levels have continued to climb during the night, with flooding levels in place across the Harrogate district.
The alert suggests low lying roads near the River Nidd may already be flooded and drivers should plan alternative routes.
The government alert says:
“We do not currently have an accurate forecast for the peak level at Hunsingore. However, upstream levels have peaked and are now starting to fall.
“Please plan driving routes to avoid low lying roads near rivers, which may be flooded.
“Please activate any property flood protection products you may have, such as flood barriers and air brick covers and stay away from fast moving water. We are closely monitoring the situation and will update this message in 8 hours or as the situation changes.”
Read more:
- Flooding puts houses in danger in Pannal and Masham.
- It was almost a white Christmas for the Harrogate district.
Higher upstream in Pateley Bridge, warnings are still in place for upper River Nidd.
Nationally, 196 flood alerts are in place, along with 115 flood warnings and two severe flood warnings, where there is a risk to life.
The River Nidd in the east of Knaresborough has burst its bank this morning. The area near Vantage Toyota has been badly affected.
A local resident has told the Stray Ferret that nobody has been evacuated yet and the flooding hasn’t reached any of the houses.
Homes in Masham and Pannal in peril as flooding strikesEmergency teams have been summoned to a home that flooded in Pannal as the Harrogate district wakes up to the effects of Storm Bella.
Property, roads and farmland around the Harrogate district have felt the brunt of a night of strong winds and heavy rain and alerts remain in place.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue said in a statement a crew responded to reports of flooding in a basement property in Pannal at 00.26am this morning.
The statement added water was pumped away from an electric switchboard and sandbags were requested from Harrogate Borough Council.
The emergency planning team at Harrogate Borough Council, which responds to serious incidents, tweeted at about 4am:
“Following a call from North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue our team have deployed to Pannal to protect a property at imminent risk of flooding.”
No further details are available.
Flood warnings are in place on the rivers Nidd and Ure as well as at Swinney Beck in Masham.
Swinney Beck is a particular area of concern: the government’s flood informations service tweeted just before midnight that properties along Westholme Road in Masham were most at risk. It added:
“Please activate any property flood protection products you may have, such as flood barriers and air brick covers and stay away from fast moving water.”
Read more:
- River Nidd on flood alert as Storm Bella hits
- Harrogate district floods: homes, cars and cows rescued
The flood information service also issued a flood warning for the River Nidd at Low Laithe overnight
“The level of the River Nidd at Pateley Bridge is rising due to persistent rain through the night. Levels are forecast to reach 1.5 metres around 03:00 and will continue to rise until around 06:00 on Sunday morning when the peak at Pateley Bridge is expected to be below 2 metres.
“The B6165 is expected to flood at this level. We are monitoring the situation closely and will update this message on Sunday morning or as the situation changes.”
A flood warning is also in place for the upper River Nidd around Pateley Bridge, with the flood information service advising motorists to plan driving routes to avoid low lying roads near rivers.
Roecliffe caravan park, near the River Ure, is also subject to a flood warning, River levels are expected to rise until mid-afternoon and people are being warned to stay away from fast flowing water.
Nationally, 181 flood alerts and 105 flood warnings are in place.
Harrogate district recovers from floods — but alerts remainKnaresborough, Pateley Bridge and Masham have all been hit by flooding today — and alerts remain in place.
Parts of Knaresborough close to the River Nidd appear to have been the worst affected.
An Environment Agency spokesman said there were no confirmed cases of people having to leave their homes.
However, Andrew Weatherhead, owner of Weatherhead Butchers in Pateley Bridge worked through the night unblocking drains and mopping two inches of water from his High Street shop.
Mr Weatherhead, whose shop opened as usual this morning, told the Stray Ferret he planned to buy some flood gates to prevent further problems.
Mr Weatherhead, who finally got home at 3am only to be woken by his house alarm going off at 5.30am, said the town’s river flood defences worked well but added:
“I think there is something wrong with the state of the drains. So many are blocked. We had to unblock them with shovels and sticks and when we did the water went down quickly.”
No other shops in Pateley are believed to have been affected.
Cars moved
Vast swathes of Knaresborough were under water this morning. The area near the Vantage Toyota dealership, close to the River Nidd, was particularly bad.
Kyley Price, a medical administrator who lives in the area, said:
“We are surrounded by water but I’m hoping it wont be too bad. Just the usual clean up to come.
“We got a warning at 5.30 this morning so moved cars etc. We are now just sitting watching TV and waiting.”
Ms Price questioned the effectiveness of the flood prevention measures in the area:
“The water rises and fills the surrounding flood plane and fields faster than ever.”
Ure rising in Ripon
A flood warning remains in place in Ripon for Ure bank and the racecourse.
The government’s flood information service posted at 11.28am today:
“The level of the River Ure at Ripon Ure bank is 3.44m and rising. We expect river levels to continue rising with peak levels expected around 3.61m this afternoon.
“Please avoid using low lying footpaths near local watercourses and plan driving routes to avoid low lying roads near rivers, which may be flooded.”

The water is rising in Ripon.
Many rural roads, including the bridge at Masham, were treacherous this morning.
The forecast is improving but a flood alert is in place for the upper Nidd. The flood information service said at 11.28am:
“Further rainfall is expected on Monday, and river levels will fluctuate through the day. Flooding of low-lying land, roads and footpaths remains possible.”
River Nidd flooding set to hit Knaresborough today
The government has urged people to implement immediate flood protection measures in response to expected flooding in Knaresborough this morning,
Following a weekend of heavy rain, much of the Harrogate district is saturated. But some low-lying areas are in particular danger, which prompted the government flood information service to issue a warning at 5.33am today.
The service said flood warnings were in place at Knaresborough caravan park and Goldsborough Mill Farm, Knaresborough.
River levels are forecast to rise as a result of heavy rainfall on Sunday. It added:
“Consequently, flooding of property, roads and land in Knaresborough is possible today. Areas most at risk are riverside land at Knaresborough Caravan Park.
“The River Nidd in Knaresborough is expected to reach a peak level of up to 1.8m at around 9am today.
“Please activate any property flood protection products you may have, such as flood barriers and air brick covers, and stay away from fast moving water.
“Our incident response staff are closely monitoring the forecast. This message will be updated in 8 hours or as the situation changes.”
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Stray drainage system robust, says contractor
The company that carried out drainage work on the Stray at West Park has said the new system is robust and conforms to industry requirements.
John Lowe, managing director of Green Hammerton company L Philliskirk and Sons, said the company used a controlled discharge system that removes water slowly — but does not leave it standing for days or weeks as has historically blighted the Stray.
The Stray Ferret reported yesterday the Stray at West Park was flooded after one night of rain, six months after Harrogate Borough Council spent £20,000 on a new drainage system for this area.
By early afternoon most of the water had indeed drained away. The main problem was large puddles on the adjoining path – with some forcing pedestrians off the footpath close to the Prince of Wales roundabout.
Mr Lowe said the hydrobrake system conformed with Yorkshire Water guidelines. He likened it to draining water through a straw, and said it could be frustratingly slow but was effective at preventing long-term flooding. He added:
“The system may not be as quick as everyone likes but it will drain the water.”
A spokesman for Harrogate Borough Council said the new drainage channels meant the water drained quicker than it did previously. He added:
“This area is one of the lowest points so the water will naturally make its way there. Over the coming hours and days this standing water will filter through to the drainage channels and subside. Rather than the weeks that it would have remained there previously.”
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