A Remembrance service will be held at the Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery in Harrogate next month, but with just a handful of people taking part.
Usually attended by dozens of dignitaries and organisations, the Stonefall event will this year be on a much smaller scaled because of covid restrictions.
Harrogate Brigantes Rotary Club said a few of its members will lay wreaths on behalf of the Royal British Legion, politicians and local service groups. They will also lay a special wreath on behalf of the New Zealand city of Christchurch to remember those that came from across the world to serve.
Reverend David Hoskins will still give a blessing at the closed event on November 8 at 1pm. A few members of the club will lay wreaths on behalf of the Royal British Legion, politicians and local service groups.
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After the wreath laying, the Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery will be open to the public for quiet contemplation around the stone of remembrance.
The Brigantes Rotary Club has asked the Harrogate community to “remember in your hearts and say a silent thank you to those who gave their lives for the freedoms we enjoy today.”
Meanwhile, the church service and parade through Knaresborough will also not go ahead. The Knaresborough branch of the Royal British Legion has asked residents to hold their own two-minute silences at home instead.
Harrogate’s town centre parade and service has also been called off.
Harrogate diving club back in the water after six monthsHarrogate District Diving Club is now back in the water after six months, but with reduced hours and coaches.
Since the reopening of pools in July the club has been eager to be allowed back to training at The Hydro. The club said its six months out of training had a “detrimental effect”.
Members’ hours in the water have been restricted. The club now only has one 2.5 hours session a week, while pre-covid it had 20 hours in the water each week.
The divers have been placed in smaller groups, with each group given 30 minutes of coaching each week. To keep it covid-safe each squad returned week by week and is now back to full capacity.
The number of club coaches has also been reduced. Two were redeployed during the pandemic: as council employees, they were sent to work in other areas in need of extra staff.
Graeme Cairns, who previously coached the council’s learn to dive scheme, has been brought in to train all of the divers on their return. Mike Gill, who is still deployed elsewhere, is returning to coach on a voluntary basis.
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- Harrogate Diving Club is eager to return to the water.
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Club chair Leanne Jalland said:
“It is great to see the divers back training in the pool. Seeing the joy and smiles of the divers each week, as a new squad enters the water and takes that first dive back into the water, makes all the hard work to get them back in the pool worthwhile.
“We have seen across the country many diving clubs have not been so fortunate, any amount of pool time is better than no pool time at all. We have seen first hand how good it is for their mental wellbeing during these uncertain times.”
Over lockdown the divers had a weekly zoom workout focusing on dryland training. The club said the main aim of this was to encourage the divers development even without the water.
The club has trained in Harrogate for more than 20 years with sporting stars including Olympic gold medallist Jack Laugher learning to dive at the club.
Harrogate district urged to show support for volunteers and NHSPeople in the Harrogate district are being asked to thank the NHS and local volunteers in contrasting ways this weekend.
Harrogate and District Community Action is encouraging people to raise a glass this evening to volunteers who continue to work during the pandemic.
HADCA, which had to cancel its annual Volunteering Oscars awards because of covid, is asking people to raise their glass or mug at 7pm and then post images of themselves saying ‘cheers’ on social media, tagging the Volunteering Oscars on Twitter using #nevermoreneeded.
The Volunteering Oscars celebrates volunteers in the district who help the elderly, children or terminally ill, or whose efforts ensure venues such as museums stay open.
John Fox, chair of HADCA, said:
“We clapped hands for the NHS – why don’t we all lift a glass to say thanks to all the volunteers across the Harrogate district for what they’ve done?”
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- A group committed to offering meals to those in need is to continue its efforts into the colder months.
- A Knaresborough carer called on local photographers to bring the outside in for care home residents.

Jonathan Sanderson and his two children practising their howls.
A Harrogate businessman has come up with an altogether different way to celebrate the NHS in a fun way that also appeals to children at Halloween.
Jonathan Sanderson, managing director of IT recruitment company Corecom Consulting, is asking people to Howl for Heroes on their doorsteps at 7pm on Saturday.
Mr Sanderson said:
Coach and Horses in Harrogate gets green light to reopen“My children, along with so many others, are disappointed that the traditional evening of our local community in Harrogate coming together trick or treating will not be able to happen due to covid.
“Howl for Heroes is a socially distanced, fun and noisy alternative to coming together on the evening and recognising the hard work of the NHS who are continuing to support those suffering with the illness.”
The Coach and Horses in Harrogate has today been given the go-ahead to reopen after several months of forced closure.
Harrogate Borough Council’s licensing sub-committee granted Samantha Nelson’s alcohol licence application when it met virtually at lunchtime.
Ms Nelson, who is the daughter of the previous landlord John Nelson, was allowed to open the pub from 10am until midnight.
The sub-committee revoked Mr Nelson’s licence in July after he showed a “blatant disregard” for social distancing guidelines in May.
Ms Nelson told the sub-committee:
“We plan to refurbish the Coach and Horses before we reopen so there is no chance that it will be open for Christmas. There is also no way I will make the same mistakes my dad did.”
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The Coach and Horses is one of Harrogate’s oldest pubs, having opened in 1827. Mr Nelson had been the licensee for 33 years.

People gathered outside the Coach and Horses in May.
The sub-committee heard how Mr Nelson, who will remain in his flat above the pub, was “aggressive and abusive” to council officials.
Ms Nelson insisted her father will have no involvement in the Coach and Horses.
Cllr Victoria Oldham, who chaired the sub-committee, granted the licence with conditions:
“The committee have decided to approve the application with three conditions. The pub will be able to open until midnight, not until 12.30am.
“No customer, carrying bottles or glasses, will be admitted to the premises at any time. No customer will be permitted to take open containers from the premises. The pull-out seats presently fixed to the exterior of the premises must be removed before it is reopened.”
The sub-committee’s decision to approve Samantha Nelson’s alcohol licence is subject to appeal in the next 21 days.
Man arrested in Harrogate after suspected £1,500 shoplifting haulA suspected shoplifter in Harrogate was arrested with £1,500 worth of goods in his car yesterday.
North Yorkshire Police arrested the man on Leeds Road at about 5.30pm following a report of shoplifting from a store on Cambridge Road.
Officers intercepted a silver car after CCTV operators alerted police.
The suspect’s vehicle was stopped and the driver, a man from the Leeds area, was arrested on suspicion of drug driving and taken into custody.
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He was later released while under investigation.
Investigations into the theft of £1,500 worth of suspected stolen goods are ongoing.
Harrogate venues warn of dire consequences of tier twoSome of Harrogate’s most popular venues have spoken of their concerns for the future of their staff and businesses if North Yorkshire moves to tier two.
North Yorkshire County Council warned yesterday the county could move from tier one to tier two by the end of the week amid rising covid infection rates.
Martin Greenhow, managing director of the Mojo group, said covid restrictions had already been “catastrophic” for the hospitality sector. He added:
“Moving through the tiers is like squeezing hard on the trigger of the executioner’s gun.
“We’ve already seen a reduction in trade of about 70% between pre-covid levels and the introduction of the curfew. Moving into tier two we’re expecting an 80% drop-off in trade, going by other sites’ progress.”
North Bar in Harrogate is also concerned about the likely impact. Assistant manager Jessica Parkinson said:
“We’re worried for the staff, what it means for them, as we’ve already had to cut hours and seen less footfall, which is very sad.”
However, Simon Cotton, managing director of the HRH Group, whose properties include the Fat Badger, the White Hart Hotel and the Yorkshire Hotel, said the main difference between tier one and tier two for venues was policing. He added:
University first year students return home to study in Harrogate“Do you look at groups of people and assume that they’re not a family or one household when they actually might be? There are lots of exceptions to the rule, such as meetings. For work reasons you’re exempt, so the rules are open to abuse so easily.
“Staff can politely ask the question but can’t be expected to strictly enforce this as we’re not the police.
“It does rely on the public doing what they should in terms of the government guidelines. It is not up to hospitality to police this.”
Two students from Harrogate have left their hall of residence in Sheffield and returned home to protect their mental health from the impact of isolation.
Alex Hamshaw and his girlfriend, both 18, are first year students at Sheffield Hallam University.
Alex’s girlfriend had to isolate for two weeks at the start of term when a flatmate not following covid guidelines came into contact with someone that had tested positive.
Both have struggled with the impact that following covid guidelines has had on their ability to make new friends, and decided to leave after three weeks, before Sheffield moved into tier three restrictions.
Speaking about why they left Sheffield, Alex said:
“We decided to come home after my girlfriend finished isolating, as if that had happened again for her or for me, it would have really negatively impacted our mental wellbeing. Coming home means that we were in a different tier to Sheffield, we could go out and see friends and see each other, and that was better for our general wellbeing than being in Sheffield.”
They’re not planning to move back to university until case numbers decrease, with the expectation that this won’t happen until after Christmas.
Despite moving home, they are still paying rent for their Sheffield accommodation and Alex estimates that he will have lost about £1500 by the time that he returns.
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While at home, the pair have decided to set up their own online business, Personal Paws Co, selling customisable dog collars and leads out of Paracord, a lightweight nylon rope originally used in the suspension lines of parachutes.

Alex’s dog Molly, modelling a collar.
With hopes to sell 500 collars or leads by Christmas, the teenagers are also hoping to do some good with their profits. Up until the 25th December, Personal Paws Co will donate 5% of its revenue to the Harrogate District foodbank.
Alex said:
“As we approach winter and it gets colder, it is even more challenging for children at this time of year, and so we have decided to donate 5% of all sales to Harrogate foodbank so that more children can enjoy a free meal as days get shorter and nights get longer. In our opinion, it’s the little things that help.
“We choose to start the business because we both have an interest in dogs and we wanted to create a product which was durable, comfortable and customisable in size and length which all dogs and dog owners could use. The profits not given to the food bank are going to be saved as a way to financially support us after graduating from uni.”
Do you have a similar story to tell us or are worried for your son and daughter isolated at University? Get in touch on contact@thestrayferret.co.uk
Downing Street Christmas tree chosen in Harrogate todayA competition to find a Christmas tree for Downing Street was held in Harrogate today.
Yorkshire shepherdess Amanda Owen, from Channel 5’s Our Yorkshire Farm, and Peter Wright from The Yorkshire Vet were joined by last year’s winners from Devon and Leicestershire to judge the entries.
The competition has been running since 1999 but this is the first time it has been held in Harrogate. It is also the first time celebrity judges have been invited.
Due to covid, the participants were unable to attend in person.
They sent their trees to the Great Yorkshire Showground where the judges selected the winners in various categories, including the prestigious ‘champion Christmas tree grower of the year’.
York Christmas Trees was crowned the winner of that category and one of its trees will have the distinction of standing outside 10 Downing Street over the festive period.
The winner of champion festive wreath category was Welford Christmas tree farm from Northampton. Its wreath will hang on the door of the Prime Minister’s residence.
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Oliver Combe of York Christmas Trees said:
“We are a small local family business who have been growing trees for over 20 years. We are overwhelmed to have won the title of champion grower for 2020, it is a huge accolade!”
The competition is run by the The British Christmas Tree Growers Association.
Heather Parry, who is the managing agent for BCTGA as well as the managing director of Yorkshire Event Centre said:
Police drugs bust near Harrogate’s Valley Gardens“The quality and the amazing scent of the trees on display was incredible; this is truly the Oscars for Christmas trees. It was heartening to hear also that many growers are selling more trees than normal, as consumers plan ahead to have a real Christmas tree as the centrepiece of their home this year”.
Police seized 50 wraps of suspected class A drugs, a knife and some cannabis after swooping on two men near Harrogate’s Valley Gardens yesterday.
The men, aged 23 and 26, were taken into custody where the 23-year-old was charged with possessing a knife and possessing class B drugs. The 26-year-old was charged with driving offences.
Both men remain under investigation on suspicion of possessing class A drugs with intent to supply.
The men, who are from Leeds, are believed to be part of county lines drug dealing across county borders.
According to North Yorkshire Police, officers on active patrol spotted the pair in a vehicle near Valley Gardens at about 5pm.
A police statement said:
“After searching the two men from Leeds and their vehicle, officers recovered 50 wraps of suspected class A drugs, a hunting knife and some cannabis.”
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- Police charge Harrogate woman, 72, after major cannabis find
- Arrests after heroin and crack cocaine seized in Harrogate
North Yorkshire Police’s Operation Expedite teams focus on county lines drug dealers who travel from outside North Yorkshire to sell drugs.
The force appealed to anyone with information about drug dealing in their area to contact it on 101.
If you prefer not to speak to the police and remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111 or online at www.crimestoppers-uk.org.
North Yorkshire could enter tier two this weekNorth Yorkshire could move into tier two coronavirus restrictions by the end of the week, according to the county council’s director of health and adult services.
Richard Webb said this morning the situation in the county was “hanging by a thread” due to rising infection rates.
The Selby and Harrogate districts are particular problem areas, with seven-day infection rates of 230 cases and 203 cases per 100,000 people respectively.
Average infection rates in the county remain below the England average of 220 cases per 100,000.
Read more:
- North Yorkshire MP: Don’t send county into tier two
- Discussions ‘ongoing’ over moving North Yorkshire into tier two
- Harrogate district’s coronavirus cases since March pass 2,000
But they are rising, which prompted Mr Webb to issue the warning at today’s weekly press briefing of the North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum, which is a partnership of agencies that tackles emergencies. He said:
“The situation in North Yorkshire is now hanging by a thread. We are currently in tier one but that is really on a knife edge.
“We may even be in a situation at the end of this week where we move into tier two restrictions. But we are hoping that we can prevent that.
“We want to stay in tier one. It is better for livelihoods and for economic wellbeing. Today we are asking people to act now to save lives more than ever.”
Mr Webb said it would be up to the government to decide North Yorkshire’s fate.
People in tier two areas are prohibited from socialising with anybody outside their household or support bubble in any indoor setting.
People in pubs and restaurants can only consume food and drink while seated. Takeaway food can only be bought after 10pm if ordered online or by phone.
The press briefing also revealed that Harrogate District Hospital has 12 coronavirus patients – three of whom are in intensive care.