“It’s really important that the United Kingdom makes an immediate open, welcoming and warm hearted commitment of sanctuary to those who wish to leave Ukraine.“Rip up the usual bureaucracy and let’s just say they are welcome and we will make it as easy as possible to be here.”
Read more:
- Nidderdale Community Welcome ready to help a refugee family
- Afghan refugees come to the Harrogate district
Mr Smith has 37,000 followers on Twitter and his message has 6,000 shares and 38,000 likes.
Sanctuary organisations in Harrogate and Ripon continue to re-settle refugee families from the war-torn countries of Syria and Afghanistan.
A new nursery run by many former members of staff at Smarties in Ripley has opened.
Smartie Land in nearby Brearton is a joint venture between Lesley Kelsey, who was a director at Smarties, and Viscount Mountgarret, who lives in South Stainley.
The nursery, which also operates a holiday club, is situated in former kennels on Viscount Mountgarret’s estate.

Ms Kelsey said the business, which opened this month and can cater for 62 children, benefited from its rural setting and spacious facilities.
She said:
“The closure of Smarties left a gap. When it closed we had about 90 children on our books.
“Houses are going up left, right and centre around Harrogate and they tend to attract families and we are here for them.
“Smarties was a one-off. It wasn’t part of a chain and this will be the same. You can offer a different service when you’re not part of a chain.”
Read more:
- Plan approved to convert former Smarties nursery in Ripley into home
- Smarties nursery in Ripley to close next month
- Parking meters installed in Ripley car park
Smarties, which opened in 1987 and catered for 52 children, closed last year.
The building is part of the Ripley estate owned by Sir Thomas and Lady Emma Ingilby, who decided not to renew the lease.
This month Harrogate Borough Council approved plans by Sir Thomas to convert the former nursery into a house.

Ripon’s new leisure centre and pool will open on Wednesday, it was announced this afternoon.
Harrogate Borough Council has just published a series of tweets announcing the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre on Dallamires Lane will welcome its first visitors at 6.30am.
The facilities include a 25-metre six-lane pool and sauna and steam room.
The council said in a statement:
“The new six-lane 25m swimming pool has 70 per cent more water space compared to Ripon Spa Baths and has a wealth of improvements that come with modern swimming facilities.
“These include the AngelEye pool safety system that, with the use of underwater cameras, assists lifeguards to detect whether swimmers are in danger or drowning.
“The new pool will be open every day of the week and offers customers a variety of different activities, including general and family swim, swimming lessons and Aquafit, as well as a sauna suite.
“Outside, a new car park has been installed along with a sheltered cycle rack, electric car charging points and a new play area.”
The pool was due to be ready nine months ago and the project is currently £4m over budget.
https://twitter.com/Harrogatebc/status/1497259622234796036
✅ Sauna and steam room
✅ Changing village with level access
✅ Dedicated baby-changing facilities
✅ Family cubicles and group changing facilities
✅ Pool hoists and reserved parking for those with disabilities
✅ Swimming lessons and children's parties— Harrogate Borough Council (@Harrogatebc) February 25, 2022
https://twitter.com/Harrogatebc/status/1497259627209236481
Welcome to Yorkshire defends 2014 Tour De France following criticism
Tourism body Welcome to Yorkshire has defended the impact of the 2014 Tour De France Grand Depart, which ended in Harrogate, after MPs were told this week that the event had no lasting impact on Yorkshire tourism.
At an MPs select committee on Tuesday, Caroline Cooper Charles, chief executive of Screen Yorkshire, which champions the film and TV industry in Yorkshire, gave evidence about promoting the UK as a tourist destination.
Asked by Labour MP Clive Efford if the Grand Depart had a lasting impact on tourism in the county, she replied:
“In all honesty, I don’t think it did.
“It certainly put the spotlight on Yorkshire and people came to see the race. Probably for a short amount of time hotels were booked up and restaurants were full. In terms of long term impact no, I wouldn’t say so.”
‘Immense international hit’
Welcome to Yorkshire played a major role in bringing the event to Yorkshire.
An estimated 300,000 people lined the streets in places including Ripon, Masham and Harrogate to watch the race.
A WTY spokesperson told the Stray Ferret the Grand Depart was an “immense international hit” that helped to put Yorkshire on a global stage and “showcase its beauty to the world”.
Read more:
- New moves to improve cycling in North Yorkshire
- Scrapping Pannal cycle lane ‘ludicrous’, says cycling group
Legacy
The spokesperson claimed the Grand Depart attracted 4 million roadside spectators and the race was watched in 188 countries with £330m worth of media coverage.
They said tweets about the race reached 230 million people and the Tour de France Grand Départ in Yorkshire trended worldwide.
The spokesperson said key to the legacy of the Grand Depart was the annual Tour de Yorkshire races from 2015 to 2019.
They added:
Residents urged to report empty homes to help solve Harrogate’s housing crisis“The Tour de Yorkshire has also been of huge economic benefit to the county and the tourism industry, further boosting the county’s economy and promoting spectacular Yorkshire across the globe.
“Benefits for the county during the Tour de Yorkshires have included record-breaking figures of 107.5m Twitter reach (2016), 2.6 million spectators along the route and a £98m economic impact (2018), plus a TV audience of 28 million in 190 countries (2019).
“This world-class cycling event is also so much more than a bike race – it’s about the crowds, the community engagement and that amazing Yorkshire welcome, plus it’s proved to be the perfect opportunity, year upon year, to let the world see Yorkshire’s spectacular countryside, stunning coastline, vibrant cities, pretty towns and villages, as well as its world-renowned history and heritage locations.”
Harrogate district residents are being urged to report empty homes as new figures show some progress has been made on the problem which is contributing to the housing crisis.
Harrogate Borough Council has faced calls to take greater action to bring empty homes back into use at a time when around 1,800 households remain stuck on the social housing waiting list due to a “desperate” lack of affordable properties.
Figures now show some progress has been made, with the number of homes empty for more than two years falling from 228 in 2019 to 205 this week.
There is still much ground to be made, but the council said the figures show it is taking positive action.
Cllr Mike Chambers, cabinet member for housing and safer communities, is now asking more property owners to bring their empty homes back into use as he also urged residents to report any cases to the council as part of a national week of action.
He said:
“We want to work with property owners who, for whatever reason, have an empty property that could be better used to provide a home for local people.
“There are options available, including the empty homes loan or rent bond scheme to carry out repairs or improvement works and bring them back into use.
“I’d urge anyone who is interested to get in touch.”
Read more:
- Boarded-up building in Harrogate town centre could become pharmacy
- Harrogate hospital currently ‘very full’, say health officials
Other figures show the number of Harrogate district homes empty for more than six months has also fallen from 838 in 2019 to 758 this week.
‘We can’t afford to waste properties’
This comes at a time when campaign group Action on Empty Homes says the nation has seen a “massive rise” in cases as it also calls for councils to be given greater powers “to act where owners and landlords won’t or can’t”.
The campaign group said:
“We believe that we cannot afford to waste such properties.
“In England 100,000 families are trapped in often poor quality, insecure temporary accommodation, which does not meet the standards that are required of the permanent, secure, social housing these families are entitled to.”
There are numerous reasons why properties can lie empty. In some instances, landlords cannot afford to renovate their property to sell or rent out.
Properties may also have been inherited and the new owners don’t know what to do with them.
Loan scheme
Harrogate Borough Council last year launched a loan scheme to help property owners carry out repairs. The loan is for anyone who does not have the money to carry out repairs to a property which has been empty for more than six months.
In what is described as a “last resort”, the council also has powers to carry compulsory purchase orders (CPOs) where efforts to bring empty homes back into use have failed and legal action is taken against landlords.
Just two CPOs were carried out in 2020/21 and the local Liberal Democrats previously said a stricter approach should be taken.
But councillor Chambers said the Conservative-run council would rather work with property owners rather than take legal action against them.
He said:
“When we have exhausted all options, we will look to make a compulsory purchase order to bring empty homes back into use.
“But we would much prefer working with property owners and highlight the options available to them.”
Councillor Chambers also said there are often empty properties which the council is unaware of, and he urged residents to report cases to the council’s empty homes officer.
Sneak Peek: Paradise arrives in KillinghallKillinghall, the large village near Harrogate with little to offer visitors, is having a moment.
A Tesco Express opened today on the site of the former Three Horseshoes pub on Ripon Road. Tomorrow, an 80-seat cafe offering food cooked by a Michelin-starred chef will open a short stroll down the road at Daleside Nurseries.
On April 8, the Old Spring Well at the other end of the village will re-open as The Curious Cow of Harrogate, promising a high-end dining experience.
Finally it seems people may have a reason to visit Killinghall other than to view new houses.

Large plants grown in hothouses are a prominent design feature.
Plants to buy and eat
The creation of Paradise Cafe has particularly caught the imagination because it fuses two successful local businesses on one site.
Daleside Nurseries has been operating in the village since 1958; Frances Atkins, Roger Olive and John Tullett forged a formidable reputation for food 20 years ago at the Yorke Arms at Ramsgill, where Ms Atkins became the first British female chef to win a Michelin star in 2003.
For 18 months the trio operated out of a van in the Daleside car park, which seemed as incongruous as seeing Ronaldo having a kickabout on The Stray.
But finally the long-planned 80-seat cafe is ready to welcome its first customers.
Situated at the rear of the nursery, the cafe has a light and airy modern feel, with large plants grown in hothouses liberally dotted around. The plants, like the art on the walls, are for sale.

The chef’s table at Paradise Cafe.
The cafe will open from 9am to 5pm six days a week and on Friday evenings.
An outdoor area overlooking the lake outside the café is due to open later this year, catering for another 80 people.
Main courses from £14 to £20
On arrival, diners are able to sit at the chef’s table directly opposite the kitchen and watch the food being prepared.
As for the menu, it includes several small plates for starters, main courses, sandwiches made with home-made bread, pastries and pudding.
Main courses include limed and ginger seared scallops, Swiss potato cake, artichoke and apple for £14, crispy duck pancake, crunchy greens and red orange gel for £15 and dry-aged Yorkshire beef steak, baked stuffed garlic potato, crisp leaf and aubergine relish for £20.

A scallops dish
Ms Atkins says the menu will change frequently but the idea is to combine plant-based food with produce from local farmers. Local cheeses will be sold at a later date.
“This is what we perceive as being healthy food, full of flavour, made with great ingredients.
“We want people to be relaxed. It’s not about how great we are. It’s about how great the food is.”

Chefs Frances Atkins and Roger Olive in the kitchen.
Stuart Townsend, managing director of Daleside, said this was the biggest improvement in Daleside’s 64-year history.
Man arrested after police seize sword, knives and drugs in Harrogate“It broadens our offering. I love growing good quality plants and Frances and her team enjoy serving good quality food so it seems the perfect fit.
“People expect more from nurseries and garden centres these days. We want to grow top quality plants and we want to sell top quality food.”
A man has been arrested after police found bags of drugs, 10 knives and a sword at a house in Harrogate yesterday evening.
Police were called to reports of a man threatening a woman in the Skipton Road area and officers detained a man in his 40s at the scene.
He was arrested and searched, and officers found bags of white powder, which is believed to be cocaine, two knives and a quantity of cash in the suspect’s possession.
This led to a further search of his house in the Skipton Road area of Harrogate, where further items were discovered including:
- More bags of what are believed to be Class A drugs
- Ten knives, including flick knives
- A sword
- A large amount of what is believed to be cannabis
- Drugs paraphernalia including digital scales
The items were seized and the suspected drugs have been sent for analysis.
The man was arrested on suspicion of drug, weapon and public order offences and remains in custody today while enquiries continue.
Read more:
- Police seize ‘substantial amount’ of drugs in Jennyfields
- Harrogate councillor calls for campaign to make class A drugs ‘shameful’
Dogs saved after falling down hole near Pateley Bridge
Two dogs had to be rescued when they fell down a hole while their owner was walking them near Pateley Bridge.
Mountain rescuers from Upper Wharfedale Fell Rescue Association were called when the owner, who has not been named, was unable to help the dogs escape.
The incident happened at Guise Cliff, near Glasshouses in Nidderdale, shortly after 2pm on Wednesday. Seven rescuers were in attendance for more than two hours.
Read more:
- Woman visiting daughter’s grave issues dog fouling plea
- Stray Pets Rescue Club: Will, Jerry, Link and Mystic are in need of loving homes
The association’s incident log said:
“Once there, the team set up a rope system allowing them to abseil down and rescue little Terrier Pippet, and fox red Labrador Pidge.
“Apart from being a little dirty the dogs were unharmed and were able to carry on with their walk home with a very grateful owner.”

Rescuers head down the hole.

Pidge is brought to the surface.
Knaresborough man jailed for historic sexual abuse
*Warning — this article contains details some readers may find disturbing.
A 64-year-old man has been jailed for three years for the sexual abuse of a young girl in the 1970s and 80s.
David Weatherald, from Knaresborough, waged what amounted to a campaign of sexual abuse of the girl in Harrogate when he was in his 20s.
The victim, now middle-aged, was so traumatised by the abuse she tried to take her own life, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Kitty Colley said that despite the offences happening so long ago, Weatherald’s previous conviction for possessing indecent images of children in 2019 showed that he had “harboured a (sexual) interest in young children” for many years.
The victim of the sexual abuse, which occurred about 40 years ago, did not make disclosures to police until September 2019 after an article appeared in the press about Weatherald’s conviction for possessing indecent images.
Ms Colley said:
“She herself contacted police and reported (that) she had been sexually abused by him as a child.
“She said that having read about him in the paper, she (decided to) come forward.”
The victim, who was just six years old when the abuse began in the 1970s, was sexually assaulted on “many” occasions.
Weatherald, who was 19 or 20 years’ old when it began, vehemently denied the allegations following his arrest and told police they were “all lies”.
Read more:
- Man jailed for dealing crack and heroin in Harrogate
- Ex-Harrogate hospital IT worker who downloaded 750,000 indecent images of children jailed again
He was initially charged with seven counts of sexual offences but denied them and the case was listed for trial in December last year, but Weatherald ultimately admitted five of those charges, including four counts of indecent assault and one of indecency with a child under 14 years of age. He appeared for sentence on Thursday.
Torrid childhood
The court heard that the victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had endured a torrid childhood.
Ms Colley said:
“She said she felt ashamed about what (Weatherald) did to her.”
The victim said the abuse had affected her “very deeply” all her adult life.
She said that at the time of the abuse she had “minimal” understanding of what was happening to her and she was now “reliving the trauma through this case”.
She said the abuse made her “feel like I was not worth anything” and resulted in a suicide attempt.
She added:
“The experiences I have gone through left me physically and mentally shattered.
“My life was stolen from me when I was six years of age and there is nothing that will get those years back.”
Ms Colley said that Weatherald’s previous conviction for possessing indecent images included 11 videos rated Category A – the worst kind – featuring “very young children, some aged seven”. The images included penetrative sexual activity with children.
Read more:
- Couple jailed after Bower Road brothel reveals modern slavery in Harrogate
- £6,000 worth of antiques and collectables stolen from Ripon shop
Weatherald, of Fossdale Close, was given a 10-month suspended prison sentence and made subject to a 10-year sexual-harm prevention order for those offences in 2019.
Three-year sentence
Nick Cartmell, mitigating, said Weatherald was deeply remorseful and at the time of the sexual abuse he too was an “isolated, immature” young man who had his own difficulties.
Judge Sean Morris, the Recorder of York, told Weatherald:
“This offending came to light as a result of you possessing, or looking at, the most dreadful illegal images of children.
“It’s quite clear that this offending…shows that your interest in children harks back some considerable time.”
Weatherald will serve half of the three-year sentence behind bars before being released on prison licence.
Mr Morris added a further prohibition to Weatherald’s sexual-harm prevention order which bans him having any advertent contact with children under 16 years of age.
Mother Shipton’s delays reopening due to flood damageMother Shipton’s Cave in Knaresborough has delayed its reopening until March 12 because of storm damage.
The Knaresborough visitor attraction was due to reopen for the season on March 5 but it remains badly affected by last weekend’s heavy rainfall and high river levels.
The storms left several fences to repair, pathways to wash down and debris to clear in the historic woodland areas.
https://twitter.com/Mothershiptons/status/1496814775371763713
The venue will now be open on weekends from March 12 and every day from April 1.
The cave’s marketing coordinator, Jay Stelling, said:
“Since Christmas, our small team have been getting everything ready for the new year with the hopes of opening the first weekend in March, but after the recent storms and adverse weather we have had to push this back.
“Luckily, we didn’t lose any of our ancient trees in the storms.”
The petrifying well, inside the site, is said to be England’s oldest visitor attraction. Visitors hear the story of prophetess Mother Shipton, who died in 1561, and see the water that turns objects to stone.
Read more:
- Colourful mosaics brighten up Harrogate street
- Knaresborough reveals plans to celebrate Queen’s platinum jubilee