A Harrogate family have spoken of how the loss of their 12-year-old son led them to set up a bakery in his memory.
Reef Carneson died in June last year after battling cancer since he was a baby. He was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia at just five months old.
Although Reef’s death left his parents Lydia and Ryan — who are originally from South Africa — grieving, the family resolved to try to do something positive.
‘He was a miracle’
Reef was the first to undergo a bone marrow transplant in Pretoria, South Africa, when he was just 11 months old.
Lydia says she and her husband, Ryan, were told that Reef would have “just days to live”.
However, Reef was a fighter and pulled through.
Lydia said:
“We realised that he was a miracle.”
Complications from his condition led the couple to take him to America in 2011 for treatment for graft-versus-host disease, which meant his body was rejecting new bone marrow.
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The family settled in Los Angeles where Reef’s condition improved until he was diagnosed with skin cancer.
He seemed to be improving but his health began to deteriorate over the years.
Following the election of President Donald Trump, the family was forced to leave America when the immigration rules were changed and their work visas became void.
Lydia, who also has British citizenship, took Reef and the family to Chapel Park in Newcastle where they settled in February 2021.
Four months later, Reef passed away after his cancer had spread.
Moving to Harrogate
Lydia and her family decided to leave Newcastle in search of a fresh start.
She said:
“We could not stay in Newcastle. The memories were too much.”
Once in Harrogate, Ryan, a trained pastry chef, tried to find work but found the grief too much to handle.
Despite the heartache, the couple decided to make a fresh start in their lives.

Reef dressed in his chef outfit ready to help his dad.
In January this year, the pair launched IndulgenceByRyan in an effort to make something positive out of their grief.
The business was inspired by Reef, who Lydia says always wanted to be like his dad and would often help him in the kitchen.
Lydia said:
“It’s so difficult to function normally when you have such grief.
“We had always thought about the bakery because it is something that we wanted to do and he [Reef] always wanted to be like his dad.”
She added that she hopes the family’s story will help others who may be grieving the loss of a loved one.
The bakery specialises in cakes, cookies and chocolate and recently has taken on a partnership with Harrogate’s fairytale boutique, Beyond Imagination Emporium.
It does not currently have its own shop in town and is currently deliveries only. Lydia says owning an outlet in Harrogate is “the dream”.
Delayed A59 Kex Gill reroute now set to start next year and finish in 2025“We would like a nice place for people to meet up and have coffee.”
The delayed £60 million reroute of the A59 at Kex Gill is now unlikely to start until next year, with work continuing until 2025.
North Yorkshire County Council previously said it hoped the reroute would start in autumn last year and take 15 months.
But the council is still negotiating on one remaining objection to compulsory purchase orders it issued for the scheme.
The A59 is the main route between Harrogate and Skipton. A diversion is planned west of Blubberhouses on the A59 at Kex Gill, which has been blighted by a history of landslides and a recent “instability issue” that cost the council £1.4 million to resolve.
Richard Binks, head of major projects and infrastructure at the council, said:
“We remain committed to progressing the essential realignment of the A59 at Kex Gill as quickly as possible.
“Negotiations over the one remaining objection are now in an advanced position and we are confident of a positive resolution in the coming weeks.
“This would enable a contractor to be on site to carry out preparatory work by the end of the year, with main construction beginning early next year. Completion would be scheduled for early 2025.”
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If left unresolved, the objections could lead to a public inquiry – which would delay the start of the project further.
Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive councillor for access at the council, told a council meeting last year.
Harrogate man admits throwing ‘brick or stone’ at Knaresborough Fire Station“The project programme without a public inquiry indicates that construction could start this autumn (2021). On the other hand, if a public inquiry is required, the start of works could be delayed by up to 15 months.”
A 32-year-old man from Harrogate received a conditional discharge today for throwing a “brick or stone-like object” at Knaresborough Fire Station.
Daniel Barnes, of Oakdale Glen, appeared before Harrogate magistrates charged with attempting criminal damage. It was his second appearance in court for the same offence in two weeks.
Barnes pleaded guilty to throwing an object at the door of the fire station on February 16.
Sean Wilson, defending, said his client had thrown a “brick or stone like object” in response to an earlier incident in which someone had driven past and said “I’m going to kill your mum”.
Mr Wilson added:
“Mr Barnes’ recent series of incidents are partly due to him possibly being evicted from his home. He was also diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia at 15 and suffers with ADHD, bipolar disorder and depression.
“His outburst was out of anger at someone in a car yelling ‘I’m going to kill your mum’.”
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Ms Campbell, chair of the magistrates, issued a six-month conditional discharge and ordered Barnes to pay fines amounting to £107, which will be taken out of his benefits allowance.
She said:
Harrogate man jailed for historic sexual abuse of young girl“You are not going to be punished today but I am instead putting you on a six-month conditional discharge. Should you do it again in the next six months you will face this charge plus the new charge. You need to keep out of trouble.
“I have taken into account that you pleaded guilty at the earliest opportunity and have reduced the condition from nine months to six.”
Warning: This article contains details some readers may find distressing.
A child abuser has been jailed for nine years for the horrific sexual abuse of a young girl in the 1990s.
Kevin Chandler, 61, from Harrogate, preyed on the youngster after grooming her to satisfy his sexual desires, York Crown Court heard.
The victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, didn’t go to police for 20 years after the abuse stopped and was so psychologically scarred she needed counselling.
Chandler, who was in his 30s when he abused the child, was charged with six counts of indecent assault and two of gross indecency with a child but denied all allegations.
However, a jury found him guilty on all eight counts following a week-long trial in January. He appeared for sentence today.
Prosecutor Katherine Robinson said the abuse lasted almost six years, when the girl was very young.
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She said the victim, now an adult, would have made a complaint much earlier but she was “scared” of Chandler.
Groomed to think it was normal
He began the abuse by kissing and sexually touching her and then making her do the same to him. He went on to perform more serious sexual acts upon her and made her perform lewd acts on him.
Following the second assault on the youngster, she was so distraught she put a rope around her neck, said Ms Robinson.
In a separate incident, the victim was left “frightened, distressed and crying” after Chandler “kissed her like an adult” and forced her to touch him on an intimate part of his body.
Ms Robinson said the victim felt she was to blame and that, even at her tender age, she was made to feel “like it was an affair” or a “special relationship”.
She was described as “very vulnerable” and a “very troubled little girl” at the time due to an already-traumatic childhood.
She had been “groomed” by Chandler to “sexualise” her and to make her “feel this was normal”.
She was left “utterly distraught”, added Ms Robinson.
The victim, who told her husband years later but still didn’t feel able to go to the police, felt an inexplicable guilt and suffered panic attacks.
Ms Robinson said the victim finally reported matters after “she managed to shake her fears, her shame…after all these years”.
Chandler, who is married with children, claimed the victim had “made up” the allegations.
“I have been robbed of years of peace and joy”
The victim appeared in court via video link to see her tormentor receive his comeuppance for years of abuse which had torn her life apart.
In a tearful and profoundly moving statement which she read out herself, she said the abuse had caused her “great stress, confusion and fear as I was psychologically abused by (Chandler)”.
She added:
“It has been 27 years now since (Chandler) started to sexually and psychologically abuse me.
“How do I find the words to describe 27 years of pain and fear and horror?”
The victim said she had received counselling and expected to continue receiving treatment “for years to come”.
She said the whole process of taking the case to court had been “excruciating for me” as it brought back all her “darkest memories and darkest thoughts”.
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The victim said that before Chandler started abusing her, she had been a “sweet and innocent” girl who was “full of potential for love and joy”.
She added:
“I was a kind and thoughtful girl, but he made me disgusting and horrible.
“What he did to me made me dirty and horrible and alone and unlovable. I’ve spent the rest of my life trying to undo that.”
The victim added:
“When I see photos of myself from the time he was abusing me…I feel overwhelmed for the grief of what I should have been.
“I should have been carefree and trusting and innocent. Instead, I was (pitched) into a dark and lonely and shameful place for years.”
The victim said she was left feeling “fundamentally worthless”.
She added:
“I have been robbed of years and years of peace and joy.”
Chandler “targeted and groomed” young girl
Nicholas Worsley, mitigating, said Chandler had led an otherwise blameless working life. He was a good husband and had been involved in voluntary work.
Judge Simon Hickey said it was “as clear as winter ice” that Chandler had targeted and groomed the young girl.
He added:
“In my judgement, you are a classic child abuser.”
Jailing Chandler for nine years, Mr Hickey told him he would have to serve two-thirds of that sentence behind bars before being released on prison licence.
In addition, the judge made a lifetime sexual-harm prevention order prohibiting Chandler from having any advertent contact with girls under 16 years of age without the express approval of their parents, guardians or police.
Chandler, of Lupton Close, Glasshouses, was also placed on the sex-offenders’ register for life.
Tributes paid to self-made businessman and philanthropist Sir Robert OgdenSir Robert Ogden, the self-made businessman and philanthropist who opened a cancer centre at Harrogate District Hospital, has died aged 86.
Sir Robert made his fortune in the mining, quarrying and building industries and donated to charities, in particular those connected to cancer care.
He was also a leading racehorse owner and co-owned See More Business, which won the Cheltenham Gold Cup and the King George VI Chase at Kempton Park.
Born in Wibsey, Bradford, in January 1936, Sir Robert was the eldest of six children. His father Albert was a master builder.
He lived in Sicklinghall, near Wetherby, where he kept his stables.
In 2001, he was awarded a knighthood for his services to charity which included the opening of the Sir Robert Ogden Macmillan Centre at Harrogate District Hospital.
The centre was opened in March 2014 and continues to offer cancer treatment and health and wellbeing services to patients today.
We're very sad to hear Sir Robert Ogden has passed away. We're eternally grateful for his generosity – it helped us to establish the Sir Robert Ogden Macmillan Centre at our hospital. Thank you Sir Robert for your support. Our thoughts are with his family and friends. pic.twitter.com/NwAGA5bBnG
— Harrogate NHS FT (@HarrogateNHSFT) March 9, 2022
The hospital said:
“We’re very sad to hear Sir Robert Ogden has passed away. We’re eternally grateful for his generosity — it helped us to establish the Sir Robert Ogden Macmillan Centre at our hospital.
“Thank you Sir Robert for your support. Our thoughts are with his family and friends.”
South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which runs a similar centre in Northallerton opened by Sir Robert, also paid tribute to him.
A spokesperson said:
“Sir Robert was a huge supporter of charities and generously helped improve cancer services in the region.
“We’ll always be grateful for his support. Our thoughts are with his family at this difficult time.”
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Successful racehorse owner
As well as charities, Sir Robert was a successful racehorse owner.
His mauve and pink checked silks were carried to victory by horses including Voy Por Ustedes and Exotic Dancer.
He also owned Cheltenham Gold Cup runner-up Exotic Dancer and top horses over the jumps, including Ad Hoc, Marlborough, Star De Mohaison, Fadalko and Squire Silk.
Former jockey and Gold Cup winning trainer, Jonjo O’Neil, paid tribute to Sir Robert.
He said:
“Very sad to hear that Sir Robert Ogden has passed away.
“We enjoyed some incredible days with Exotic Dancer, notably winning the Lexus and a second in the Gold Cup.
“He was a wonderful gentleman who will be sadly missed. My thoughts are with his family and friends.”
Sir Robert died peacefully at home on March 6, 2022.
He is survived by his second wife Lady Ana Ogden and his two sons Adam and Robert from his first marriage.
In memory of Sir Robert, a donation page has been set up at the University of Leeds to help support research into brain cancer. You can donate and find more information here.
Harrogate couple spend 3 days in vain calling Jet2 to rearrange £824 holidayA Harrogate couple have spoken of their frustration at spending three days in vain trying to call Jet2 to cancel their holiday.
David and Celia Bishop, both 75, were due to fly to Faro in Portugal on Monday. But after realising their passports were about to expire, they tried to rearrange their flights.
The couple said they have been on the phone attempting to get through to Jet2 for about six hours since Monday. They have tried numerous different numbers but have yet to get through.
Mr Bishop admitted his “stupid error” had initially caused the issue but with a week to go and an appointment booked to get new passports next week, he hoped to be able to rearrange the flights.
The couple paid £824 for the week-long package holiday, which included flights and hotel. It would be their first holiday in two years.
Mr Bishop said:
“It was my own stupidity. After two years of lockdown I just forgot to check them until Monday.
“I’ve tried at different times but I also rang bang on 8am Tuesday and Wednesday, when the lines opened, but there was no answer for over an hour. Surely if I ring at the time they open there can’t be an hour’s worth of people ahead of me? I think the system may have crashed.”
Mr Bishop and his wife even drove to Leeds Bradford Airport on Tuesday to speak to a member of Jet2 staff. But they said when they arrived the woman on the desk told them they would have to ring the same number they had been calling.
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Mr Bishop said the terms and conditions of the deal mean it is possible to change the flight up to the day of departure if an administration fee is paid. There may also be costs for the new tickets.
Automated response
They say they are willing to pay these fees but with no word from Jet2 they are worried they could lose out on the £824 completely. Mr Bishop added:
“For such a huge tour operator to abandon their customers and provide no customer service just struck me as wrong.”
Ms Bishop also tried an email address but received an automated response warning of a 14-day wait. She said:
“We were both really looking forward to this holiday. We understand it was our fault initially but to not answer the phone at all is not on. Hopefully we can rearrange it when our new passports get here next week but I’m not holding out hope.”
Mr and Ms Bishop both said they will continue to call and wait to hear from the tour operator.
Since publication, a spokesperson for Jet2 has responded to say:
New environmentally friendly business to open in Ripon“We are pleased to confirm that we have since been in touch with Mr Bishop and the matter is now resolved.”
New business opens in Ripon
A new environmentally and ecologically-focused business will open in Ripon next week
The Green House, at 11 North Street, is being opened on Tuesday by Patricio Maglio, one of Ripon’s hornlblowers, and his partner Rebecca Crallan.
With a planet-friendly ethos, the store will sell home and garden supplies designed to have minimal impact on the environment.

Patricio Maglio
Ms Crallan said:
“Our aim is to make it easier for people in the city and surrounding villages to make greener choices without compromising on aesthetics or function,
“We have done our research on refillables that do the job, along with plastic-free sponges that don’t disintegrate and compostable cloths that have a luxury feel.”
Harrogate start-up launches sustainable skincare range

Anna Daniels
Harrogate firm Josie Rose has launched a luxury overnight face mask.
Anna Daniels founded skincare brand Josie Rose in 2019 and has now entered the emerging ‘skin minimalism’ market with its first product: a hydrating retinol overnight face mask.
The new product has already appealed to local retailers, such as Hoopers in Harrogate, and sells direct to the consumer via its website.
Anna Daniels, managing director and founder said:
“Multifunctional products such as our overnight face mask deliver great results due to the concentrated formulas, this enables a simpler skincare and beauty routine, saving customers time and money and of course meaning less products, which is a more sustainable option.
Harrogate firm wins major NHS contract
A Harrogate-based company has won an NHS contract to scale up remote patient monitoring across Scotland.
Under the three-year contract, Inhealthcare will provide technology to enable people to record relevant information in the comfort of their own homes and relay readings to NHS teams for analysis.

inhealthcare CEO Bryn Sage
The technology is being rolled out across Scotland’s health boards. The service can be used to manage illnesses including hypertension, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, heart disease, diabetes, depression, malnutrition, cancer and Covid.
Georgia Nelson, senior business development manager at Inhealthcare, said:
“Winning this contract represents another major validation of technology-enabled care and provides the foundations for many more citizens to benefit from improved health and wellbeing at home and better quality of life.”
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New Harrogate bar for craft beer lovers could be coming soonThe owners of Husk Beer Emporium in Harrogate hope to open a bar this summer that showcases the best craft beers from the UK and abroad.
Danny Duckworth and Tom Gill, both 33, opened the shop on King’s Road just before the first covid lockdown. It sells a wide array of craft beers with idiosyncratic branding and flavours.
They said the next step is opening their own bar and they recently submitted plans to Harrogate Borough Council to do this.
The bar would be in a unit that was previously home to Greek restaurant Souvlaki on Station Square, opposite the Queen Victoria monument.
If all goes to plan, they said the venture could open by May. It will offer live music, meet the brewery nights, food, outdoor seating and an ‘Aladdin’s cave’ of unique beers.

The bar would open in this empty unit on Station Square
‘Weird and wonderful’ beers
The friends met as students at St Aidan’s Church of England High School and are excited by the prospect of moving into a more prominent location in the town.
Mr Duckworth believes craft beer can offer a more immersive experience for drinkers than traditional real ale, due to its taste combinations and flavours.
He said variety was the key to what they offer.
“We pride ourselves on weird and wonderful beers”
As well as selling more traditionally brewed craft beers, Husk also has a well-stocked range of alcohol-free and gluten-free options.
Mr Duckworth said:
“People come here on a Friday and buy eight bottles of beer and they will all taste different.”

Inside Husk Beer Emporium
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Craft beer trail
Craft beer muscled its way onto the drinking scene several years ago and the trend has proved that it has staying power.
Harrogate was once not known for alternative, DIY-style bars, but Mr Duckworth said Major Tom’s Social opened the door for places like the Disappearing Chin, North Bar and themselves.
Mr Gill said he hopes Husk bar can be part of a Harrogate craft beer trail, boosted by the Station Gateway scheme that would see the outside area at the end of James Street pedestrianised to allow for al-fresco summer drinking.
He said:
“More and more people are seeking places like this out.”
Mr Duckworth added:
Harrogate’s new vegan restaurant venture collapses“The craft beer scene in Harrogate is buzzing for us to open, we hope they can support us.”
A vegan restaurant chain that planned to open a location in Harrogate has ceased trading.
Vertigo took over the space on Station Parade next to Farmhouse in July 2021 and advertised in its window that it was ‘coming soon’.
Since then there has been no sign of movement. The building has remained vacant with only Vertigo branding visible to passers-by.
When the Stray Ferret sought an update in January, we were told the company couldn’t confirm a date for the Harrogate opening due to covid uncertainty.
However, Vertigo has now posted on social media that it has now gone out of business. It said:
“It is with a heavy heart we have to announce Vertigo is no more.
“Sadly, we have ceased trading at all of our sites. The pandemic really took its toll on us, and trade is still well behind what it was pre-March 2020; and now with significantly increased costs (especially utilities) it is no longer viable for us to operate.”
The chain operated three eateries in Manchester.
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Ripon MP urges Boris Johnson to take ‘more humane approach’ to Ukraine refugees
Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith urged Boris Johnson to adopt a “more humane approach” to Ukrainian refugees at Prime Minister’s Questions today.
Speaking in the House of Commons, Mr Smith, a Conservative, said to Mr Johnson:
“People across the country are genuinely concerned at our response on refugees, on the bureaucracy, on the tone of our response.
“He’s shown with vaccines that government change really comes from the very top. Please can I urge him to look again at resetting our policy and taking control of a more humane approach to those women and men fleeing from Ukraine.”
Mr Johnson replied that this government “have done more than any other to resettle vulnerable people since 2015”.

Mr Johnson responds to Mr Smith.
He added:
“I think there is a huge opportunity now for us to do even more and that’s why my friend, the Rt Hon Secretary of State for Levelling Up will be setting out a route by which the British people — not just the family reunion route which can run into the hundreds of thousands — but also a route by which everybody in this country can offer a home to people fleeing Ukraine.”
Mr Johnson said further details would be revealed “in the next few days”.
Just over a week ago Mr Smith urged the government to “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”.
Harrogate Conservative leader defends local response
Harrogate Borough Council leader Richard Cooper has accused the opposition Liberal Democrat leader Pat Marsh of appearing ignorant after she asked what steps the Tory-controlled council was taking to help the people of Ukraine.

Cllr Pat Marsh
Cllr Marsh asked in an email:
“What is being planned? Have we earmarked possible accommodation, have monies been allocated to help to feed, possibly clothe people?
“Please start some proactive actions now, the people of Harrogate district would support all efforts to help these desperate people fleeing a war zone, not of their making. We cannot just sit by and do nothing.”
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She also urged the council to lobby the UK government to grant more visas to Ukrainians.
Cllr Cooper’s response, seen by the Stray Ferret, says Cllr Marsh was “entirely wrong to allege that Harrogate Borough Council has sat by and done nothing”.

Cllr Richard Cooper
He added:
“For a start I have asked the council housing team to identify available properties so that we can react quickly to accommodation refugees as we did for Syrian and Afghan refugees.
“We have established contact with Jenny Travena, a former independent councillor, who is working with the Harrogate District of Sanctuary to coordinate our efforts when refugees arrive.
“We will take part in the government’s matching scheme to provide suitable accommodation with individuals and families fleeing the war when the final arrangements for it are announced.
“We have also determined that we have no contracts with Russian companies nor investments with them. We have cancelled performances at the Royal Hall from Russian linked companies and we have shown our solidarity with the people of Ukraine by hoisting their flag at the Civic Centre and the war memorial.
“I am concerned that your email gives an impression – granted that it appears to be from ignorance – that the borough council is taking no action whatsoever to prepare for Ukrainian refugees. This is entirely untrue. The action you have asked for is already being taken and I am rather surprised you didn’t know about it.”