A person was taken to hospital after a house caught fire in Little Ouseburn in the early hours of this morning.
Firefighters from Boroughbridge, Knaresborough and Acomb were called to the incident at 1.15am this morning.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service‘s incident log says everyone was out of the house by the time the emergency services arrived.
The log adds:
“One occupier left with paramedics, treated on scene for smoke inhalation and taken to hospital via road ambulance.
“Crews extinguished the fire using hose reels. Incident will be revisited by crews for checks this morning.”
Read more:
- Man denies firearm charge at Harrogate gastro pub
- Work starts on Great Ouseburn housing development
- Quick-thinking Little Ouseburn farmer averts field fire
‘Act now’ flood warning issued in Harrogate district
People are being urged to act now in low lying areas near Boroughbridge, where flooding is expected today.
Although the Harrogate district is ending the year with unseasonably mild temperatures of 12 degrees centigrade expected at midnight, recent wet weather is having an impact.
The government’s flood warning website has flagged up land near the caravan park at Roecliffe, near Boroughbridge, as the local area in most imminent danger due to rising levels on the River Ure.
The warning says:
“River levels are rising on the River Ure due to rainfall. Flooding is forecast to affect locations near the River Ure, with low lying land expected to be most affected, particularly around Roecliffe Caravan Park.
“Flooding is affecting Roecliffe Caravan Park from 03:30 PM on 31/12/2021. The forecast is dry for throughout the afternoon and this evening, with some showers expected tomorrow. River levels will start to fall overnight.”
Read more:
- Boroughbridge streets flooded as storms hit Harrogate district
- Boroughbridge flood defences get £50,000 government boost
- Eyecatching sculpture at Fountains Abbey highlights flood fears
It is one of only two flood warnings currently in place in England. The other is in Carlisle.
People are being advised to move vehicles to higher ground, move family and pets to safety, move important items upstairs and turn off gas, electricity and water supplies.
A less severe flood alert has been issued for the Lower River Ure, near Ripon.
It said prolonged overnight rainfall caused rising river levels this morning.
“Levels are now peaking in the upper reaches of the catchment, but levels in the lower reaches of the catchment are still rising and will continue to do so through today, Friday 31st December.
“Some further showers are expected at times today, with weather conditions remaining unsettled for the coming days.”
No. 1: The cycling schemes that divided Harrogate
Nothing generated more debate on the Stray Ferret’s social media this year than schemes to promote cycling in and around Harrogate.
There was the Otley Road cycle path, Beech Grove Low Traffic Neighbourhood, plans to make Oatlands Drive one-way to vehicles and funding for cycle schemes on Victoria Avenue in Harrogate and Harrogate Road in Knaresborough.
But the £10.9 million Station Gateway scheme proved the most controversial of all.
Gateway: petitions and legal threats
The scheme aims to transform the gateway to the town near the bus and train stations by reducing traffic on part of Station Parade to single lane and part pedestrianising James Street while encouraging cycling and walking.

How James Street would look.
With funding for the initiative secured from national government, North Yorkshire County Council and Harrogate Borough Council, which both support the scheme, ran two public consultations this year.
Both revealed a deeply divided town: some welcomed the opportunity to create a greener town by encouraging cycling and reducing car use; others felt the scheme would merely move traffic off the A61 Cheltenham Crescent and onto nearby residential streets, cause delays on Station Parade and damage town centre businesses.
Matters came to a head at a feisty Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce meeting in February when pro-gateway representatives, led by Don Mackenzie, executive member for access at the county council, gave a presentation to a sceptical audience.

Don Mackenzie speaking at the chamber meeting.
It ended with businesses threatening to mount a judicial review to halt the process.
The results of the second consultation, published this month, revealed that of 1,320 replies to an online survey, 55% felt negatively, 39% positively and five per cent neutral towards the scheme. One per cent said they didn’t know.

A consultation event in Victoria Shopping Centre.
The chamber has called for the scheme to be halted and two residents groups have filed petitions opposing the project in its current form.
The county council is expected to decide next month whether to proceed with the scheme but the early indications are it will press ahead with final designs in the hope that work will start in spring.
Read more:
- New data reveals dramatic impact of Beech Grove closure on nearby roads
- Majority are negative towards Harrogate Station Gateway, consultation reveals
- ‘Severe weather’ delays Otley Road cycle path in Harrogate
- Victoria Road one-way scheme will stop ‘rat run’, says cycle group
Beech Grove: barriers and cuts across the Stray
North Yorkshire County Council’s decision to ban through traffic on Beech Grove caught many people by surprise in February.
The move aimed to link Beech Grove with the forthcoming Otley Road cycle path and the proposed Victoria Avenue cycling improvements, creating a more connected cycling route around Harrogate.

Tyre tracks on the Stray next to the planters on Beech Grove.
Planters blocking traffic were initially introduced on a six-month trial basis in February but this was extended to 18 months, meaning a decision on whether to extend the scheme will be due after August 2022.
Some vehicles on Beech Grove initially flouted the law by driving on Stray land to bypass the planters.
Data obtained by the Stray Ferret this month following a freedom of information request to the council revealed the move has so far had little impact on cycling journeys on Beech Grove.
It has, however, had a considerable impact on traffic on nearby streets Victoria Road and Queens Road. But the council claims the data reveals there is “no evidence” to support claims that traffic has increased on Cold Bath Road.

Malcolm Margolis on Beech Grove
Harrogate cycling campaigner Malcolm Margolis conducted his own survey, which produced higher figures for cyclists. He claimed it proved the initiative was working well.
The issue looks set to rumble on throughout the year until a decision is made on whether to continue the experiment after August.
Otley Road: work finally begins
Work finally began on the much-delayed cycle path in winter when phase one of the project, from Harlow Moor Road to Arthur’s Avenue, got underway.
North Yorkshire County Council hopes the path will improve safety and alleviate congestion along the Otley Road corridor.

Phase one work gets underway.
Phase one was due to finish before Christmas but the council blamed ‘severe weather’ for another delay and said work should now finish in January.
Phase two, from Harlow Moor Road to Beech Grove, is due to start in March.
It is unclear when phase three, from Harlow Moor Road to Cardale Park, will start. That stretch of the cycle lane relies on developer funding from housing built in the west of Harrogate.
The county council is currently working on various plans, including a feasibility study, for phase three.
Oatlands Drive plans scrapped
North Yorkshire County Council announced in February it had received £1m from the Department for Transport’s Active Travel Fund for four schemes to improve the infrastructure for cyclists and pedestrians.
Three of the schemes were for the Harrogate district. They were: the A59 Harrogate Road, Knaresborough, between Badger Mount and Maple Close; Oatlands Drive, Harrogate between Hookstone Road and Knaresborough Road and Victoria Avenue, between the A61 and Station Parade.
The projects for Knaresborough and Victoria Avenue are still due to proceed.
But plans to make Oatlands one-way to traffic and improve the narrow cycle lanes were shelved after 57% of consultation respondents opposed the proposal. They cited the impact on school buses and the creation of a ‘rat run’ on surrounding residential streets at peak times.

Oatlands Drive, Harrogate.
Subsequent traffic proposals for the saints area were also dropped after opposition.
The council said it would commission an Oatlands constituency feasibility study’ to “re-assess opportunities” for infrastructure improvements but so far nothing has been forthcoming.
Traffic continues to park in the cycle lanes on Oatlands Drive. Harrogate Borough Council introduced signs urging motorists not to do it but they appear to have had little impact.

One of the signs on the Stray alongside Oatlands Drive.
In this article, which is part of a series on the 15 stories in the Harrogate district that shaped 2021, we look at the return of the show in a year in which many smaller agricultural events in the district fell victim to covid again.
The Great Yorkshire Show in July signalled a brief return to some sort of normality after covid decimated another year of outdoor events.
The show was cancelled last year and the venue’s Yorkshire Event Centre was converted into a covid vaccination site in the early months of the year.
For a while, it seemed possible that Yorkshire’s flagship farming event might have to be cancelled for a second year running. But the Yorkshire Agricultural Society took the decision to hold it over four days so visitors could spread out — and the risk paid off.

Prince Charles at the show
The Stray Ferret attended all four sun-kissed days to watch award-winning goats, sample delicious local food and drink, and we were front row for a surprise royal visit when the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall attended.
The couple arrived at lunchtime on day three and were greeted by hundreds of visitors at the gate.
Prince Charles spent time inspecting sheep, while the Duchess of Cornwall visited the children’s discovery zone.
Both also took time out to speak with the many visitors and exhibitors, including Phil Airey from Harrogate gardening charity Horticap.
The Stray Ferret’s videos of the royal couple attending the event and leaving the Stray via helicopter went viral and received over 200,000 views on our Facebook page. You can view them on our YouTube page here and here.
Read more:
- Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Show to remain four-day event
- Emotional Harrogate reunion for Puss the cat and her Scottish owners
This year’s show also got a happy (and emotional) ending a week after it ended.
Farmer David Mitchell and his wife Annette drove 200 miles from East Ayrshire to be reunited with the intrepid Puss the Cat, who they feared was lost forever after she bolted from his trailer after sneaking in and hitching a ride to Harrogate.
Many shows cancelled
But although the Great Yorkshire Show went ahead, and will remain a four-day event in 2022, other agricultural shows weren’t as fortunate.
Nidderdale Show, which usually attracts about 15,000 people to Pateley Bridge in September, was cancelled.
So was Ripley Show, Birstwith Show and Tockwith Show, with organisers citing concerns over health, logistics and the extension of social distancing restrictions.
Masham Steam Engine and Fair Organ Rally called off its summer event, citing “too many uncertainties to proceed”.
But the unique Masham Sheep Fair went ahead in September.

Masham Sheep Fair
There is no other event like it in the district. As well as sheep judging, it offered sheepdog trials, tours of the Theakston and Black Sheep breweries, Morris dancing, fleece stalls and even sheep racing to keep the crowds entertained.
Organiser Susan Cunliffe-Lister told the Stray Ferret she was determined to hold the fair this year despite uncertainty over covid.
Weeton Show also decided to proceed and was rewarded with a sell-out crowd and glorious sun.
Agricultural shows are a major part of the district’s summer life and many people will be hoping they return en masse in 2022.
The Stray Ferret’s top 5 videos of the yearFrom a peculiar ceremony in Masham to a choir singing in a car park, here are our top five favourite videos of the last year.
The videos are in no set order and do not necessarily reflect the number of views it received at the time but captured some heartwarming moments.
In total the video is eight minutes long, with some clips running up to three minutes and others running for less than a minute.
Video 1 – Highlights from the Great Yorkshire Show 2021
The first video is our highlights of the Great Yorkshire Show 2021. It was return of the show after a year out for coronavirus.
During the video you will see some of those who tried out in various competitions, a special royal visit as well as the sights and sounds of the show.
Video 2 – Harrogate tries out deep fried creme eggs
A Harrogate fish and chip shop put an unusual twist on the Cadbury’s Creme Egg by dipping them in batter and frying them.
Sophie Phillips, who owns Harrogate Fisheries on Skipton Road with her partner Tim, said the cream egg innovation “sounds totally wrong” but they were a hit.
Video 3 – Harrogate choir delights with performances in a car park
One of the unusual but beautiful sounds of the coronavirus pandemic for residents in Harrogate was the choir which would perform in a car park due to restrictions.
Since September the choir has been using the unconventional rehearsal space, on the 10th floor of the multi-storey car park on Tower Street.
The group was able to pull off its rehearsals by keeping the group to a maximum of 30 and social distancing.
Video 4 – Peculiar Masham ceremony delights
We captured a rare and curious tradition in Masham were an apprentice barrel make became a journeyman cooper.
Euan Findlay, who started work at Theakston Brewery five years ago, was centre stage for the historic ‘trussing in’ ceremony.
Fellow coopers from across the country gathered in Masham to witness Mr Findlay’s coronavirus-delayed initiation into the Federation of Coopers.
Video 5 – Emotional Harrogate reunion for Puss the cat
We also filmed the emotional reunion of Puss the cat, who escaped from the Great Yorkshire Show after sneaking into a Scottish farmer’s sheep trailer, and her owners.
Farmer David Mitchell and his wife Annette drove 200 miles from East Ayrshire to collect the intrepid moggy who they feared was lost forever.
Mr Mitchell arrived at the showground on Wednesday last week to show sheep. When he opened the trailer, Puss bolted and disappeared.
Daily figures from the UK Health Security Agency show that a further 369 infections have been recorded in the Harrogate district.
The number represents another record high for covid cases. It’s the third day in a row that record cases have been reported in the district.
Meanwhile, home PCR and lateral flow test kits have been unavailable on the government website all day.
The lack of availability has posed a problem for those wishing to test of New Year’s Eve celebrations at a time of surging Omicron cases.
Read More:
However, slots are still available at local test sites.
No further deaths from patients who tested positive for covid have been reported at Harrogate District Hospital, according to NHS England.
Latest available figures show 13 covid patients are being treated at Harrogate District Hospital.
No.8: lockdowns, boosters and an illegal partyIn this article, which is part of a series on the 15 stories in the Harrogate district that shaped 2021, we look at the ongoing covid problems.
Over the past 12 months, covid has continued to bring misery across the district.
On January 1, the district had recorded 4,653 covid cases since March 2020; now, at the end of the year, that number has risen to more than 25,500 positive cases.
What’s more, the infection rate is sky high again and businesses are ending the year in the same position as they did at the same time last year — wondering if they can survive.
The district started the year under tier three restrictions, meaning people could only meet in groups of six outdoors and pubs and restaurants could only operate as takeaways.
It had previously been in tier 2, which allowed hospitality venues to open as long as they served substantial meals.
The change came in on December 30 and ruined hospitality venues’ hopes of bumper new year takings to offset some of the previous months’ covid losses.
Illegal party
However, the guidelines weren’t followed by everyone. The Stray Ferret revealed in January that pub and hotel manager Simon Cotton held an illegal New Year’s Eve party with 10 guests at the Yorkshire Hotel.
Mr Cotton (pictured above) was alleged to have asked staff to work at the event despite it being against covid rules.
He denied the allegations but the following week North Yorkshire Police issued a £1,000 fixed penalty notice for a breach of coronavirus regulations at a hotel in Harrogate on New Year’s Eve.
Third national lockdown
A short while after, on January 6, the country entered its third lockdown. This was extremely tough for local people and business owners who were once again thrust into home-working, online orders and furlough pay-outs.
The roadmap out of lockdown was announced on March 8 and, from there, schools and businesses began to reopen.
In the same month, the district hit 100 covid deaths at Harrogate and District Hospital. The Stray Ferret wrote a series of article remembering some of the 100 that died.
Events, such as Northern Alborough Festival, returned, cinemas welcomed back customers and the beauty and hair industry reopened with queues of eager people needing a haircut.

Covid precautions in Kate Borgen’s Ikonik hairdresser on King’s Road
A brief spell of normality
Then came summer and a little normality resumed. People went on holiday, visited the theatre and large concerts returned. Face masks were no longer compulsory.
But for the second year running, school exams were cancelled and results based on teacher gradings. Once again, the district saw high percentages for A* to C grades.
By the end of summer, the vaccination scheme was well underway with many over-18s having had two doses. Then came booster jabs.
The rollout began in September, and sites such as Knaresborough Chain Lane Community Hub, Pateley Bridge Pharmacy, Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Showground and Ripon Racecourse have been at the forefront of the campaign.
Now, more than 80,000 people in the district have had their covid booster.
Read more:
- Harrogate and Ripon hospitals restrict visitors due to Omicron
- Disabled Harrogate woman threatened with Christmas eviction from care home
Nevertheless the emergence of Omicron has seen rates rocket again. Winter also saw the district reach the grim milestone of 200 covid deaths at Harrogate District Hospital, which stopped routine visits to patients two days before Christmas.
But the Harrogate pantomime has gone ahead, unlike last year, and — at the time of going to press — Harrogate’s hospitality sector was hoping to be open on New Year’s Eve.
But few are expecting bumper takings as covid’s shadow continues to loom large.
Harrogate district reports record 323 daily covid casesThe Harrogate district has had another record day for covid cases with 323 reported, according to the latest daily government figures.
The number is the highest recorded in the district since the UK Health Security Agency started reporting figures in March 2020.
Nationally, the UK has also reported a record number of infections. Figures show 129,471 cases have been recorded as the Omicron variant continues to surge.
The Harrogate district’s seven-day covid rate has also reached a record high and stands at 997 per 100,000 people.
Across the county, the rate stands at 879 and the England average is 1,217.
Read more:
- Covid postpones Harrogate Town’s second festive fixture
- Pilgrims brave the elements for Ripon’s Boxing Day walk
Meanwhile, UK Health Security Agency figures show that a total of 100,290 booster and third vaccines have been given in the Harrogate district so far.
No further deaths from patients who tested positive for covid have been reported at Harrogate District Hospital, according to NHS England.
Latest available figures show 13 covid patients are being treated at Harrogate District Hospital – an increase from eight last week.
No.11: Harrogate energy firm CNG goes out of businessHarrogate energy company CNG became the victim of a global phenomenon this year when it ceased trading after 27 years.
Wholesale energy prices spiralled this year, and the impact was dramatic, with CNG one of more than 20 UK companies exiting the market.
Paul Stanley, chief executive of CNG, told the Stray Ferret the company failed because four of its main customers went out of business within two weeks, leaving it with unpaid bills.
Attempts to raise capital or sell the business were unsuccessful due to continued market volatility and high prices in the energy sector.
The company supplied about 15 to 20 retail energy companies through its wholesale business arm and also has around 50,000 business customers. About 150 jobs were lost.

CNG’s headquarters on Victoria Avenue
Swift collapse
Despite being regarded as a local success story for the majority of its 27 years, CNG’s collapse was swift and unforgiving.
Alarm bells began to ring on October 14 when Mr Stanley sent a letter to customers saying it was exiting the wholesale market. Two weeks later the company entered liquidation.
With Christmas approaching, it couldn’t have come at a worse time for staff.
A series of meetings were held between company bosses and worried employees, who had questions about redundancy pay.
Staff have been paid for November but were not expected to be offered a redundancy settlement until after Christmas through a government scheme.
A source told the Stray Ferret it was a “stressful time to have no income.”
Read more:
- In Depth: Why Harrogate success story CNG ended in collapse
- Harrogate energy firm CNG ceases trading
Administrators
CNG then entered the Supplier of Last Resort process operated by the government’s energy regulator Ofgem.
The SoLR procedure was established by Ofgem as a safety net to ensure that when a company stops supplying energy, affected customers are guaranteed continuity of supply through other companies.
However, businesses that were supplied gas by CNG were warned that their energy bills will be expected to rise.
Interpath Advisory has now been appointed as administrator, and around 30 staff are working to close the company.
CNG was also synonymous with Harrogate Town football club, becoming the first-ever sponsor of their Wetherby Road ground from 2008 until 2020 when it was rebranded the CNG Stadium.
The company was also well-known in Harrogate as a supporter of local charities and community projects.
No. 13: The swift downfall of crime commissioner Philip AllottIn this article, which is part of a series on the 15 stories in the Harrogate district that shaped 2021, we look at the resignation and subsequent fallout of former North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner, Philip Allott.
The spotlight shone more intensely than ever in 2021 on one of the district’s lesser known political positions.
Elections for North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner are characterised by low turnout, with many voters questioning the value of the role.
The commissioner is paid £74,000 to hold the county’s chief constable and chief fire officer to account, and receives a budget of £1.1 million. But the level of scrutiny towards the role elevated dramatically this year.
It all started routinely enough when Knaresborough man Philip Allott was elected to succeed fellow Conservative Julia Mulligan in May.
Mr Allott made an energetic start, pledging action on issues such as pet theft and antisocial driving. But his downfall would be swift.
In an interview on BBC Radio York in September, he said Sarah Everard, who had been murdered by police officer Wayne Couzens, should not have “submitted” to arrest and that women “need to be streetwise” about arrest powers.
Keir Starmer calls for resignation
Hundreds of complaints were sent to the commissioner’s office, which found itself under more scrutiny than it ever had in its nine-year existence.
On a near daily basis, politicians lined up to condemn Mr Allott, with Labour leader Keir Starmer among those calling for his resignation.
Lucy Arnold, from campaign group Reclaim The Streets, said Mr Allott’s comments were “horrifically offensive”.
Read more:
- Councillors pass ‘no confidence’ vote in police commissioner Philip Allott
- Police commissioner Philip Allott resigns
Mr Allott apologised but resigned days later as the storm continued. The time span from his comments on-air to his stepping down was just 13 days.
Mr Allott acknowledged that his position was untenable because of the confidence he lost from both the public and by his fellow politicians.
Weeks later Zoe Metcalfe, a Conservative councillor on Harrogate Borough Council and of North Yorkshire County Council who lives at Aldborough, was elected as the new commissioner. Turnout was just 14%.