Local artists, craftspeople and photographers are opening their doors to the public this weekend to showcase work as part of NiddArt Trail.
The trail, run by community organisation Nidderdale Art Trail, aims to highlight both the artistic talent on offer throughout the district, as well as keep community spirit alive.
It originated as Nidd Art Fest, which ran from 1997 to 2008, and has been known as NiddArt Trail since 2009.
Venues in upper and lower Nidderdale, Pateley Bridge, Bewerley, Knaresborough and surrounding villages will house the works of both professional artists, such as Claire Baxter Gallery and JOT’s Gallery, as well as amateur groups such as Pateley Bridge Art Club, which will hold its summer exhibition in St Cuthbert’s School, and Lofthouse Art Group.
A number of community venues will also host featured works, including Summerbridge Methodist Church and Sawley Village Hall.
St Paul’s Art Group will have a variety of mediums on display, including photography and crafts, with some on sale to the public. The work will be held in St Paul’s United Reformed Church, Harrogate, on 26 and 27 August. Refreshments will also be available.
Poetry readings will also take place at Darley Methodist Church as part of the trail. Reverend Alastair Ferneley of Dacre and Alan Jordan, Lay Pastor in the Methodist Church, will be reciting their own poetry on Saturday, August 19, and Saturday, August 26.
Paintings, pottery and photographs curated by local artists will all be housed in St Andrew’s Church, in Blubberhouses, on 19 and 20 August, as well as 26 – 28 August too.
Treasurer Charles Mellor said:
“It’s very much a community event and is made from a mix of talent and community effort.
“There is quite a spectrum of activity this year.”
Some pieces will be available to buy from both the professional and amateur artists, however many choose to simply be involved in the trail.
“I think people just really enjoy being a part of it.
“Many of the groups and venues involved become very enthusiastic about the trail.”
The participating venues are free to attend and will be open at various times from Friday, August 18 to Monday, August 28.
The trail has been available to view online from August 1.
Find a full breakdown of the participating artists and venues, as well as their opening times, here.
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Stray Ferret Business Awards: Sustainable Business
The Sustainable Business award is sponsored by York & North Yorkshire Growth Hub.
The York & North Yorkshire Growth Hub aims to provide businesses of all sizes and sectors effective and impartial business support.
As a local organisation, the service provided is tailored to the needs of individuals and their particular region.
This award recognises those businesses that have put sustainability at the top of their agenda by reducing their impact on the environment.
Finalists
Full Circle Funerals
Full Circle Funerals aims to improve the standards and expectations of funeral services.
Full Circle is the first funeral director in the UK to achieve B Corp status – an international measure of sustainability and business for good.
The company led a crowdfunding campaign in 2022, raising over £20,000 to fund research into the environmental impact of certain funeral choices.
It was also named UK Green Funeral Director of the Year in 2021 and 2022.
Sarah Jones, Founder and Director of Full Circle Funerals, said:
“The environment is important to us and to many of the bereaved people we support, which is why it is important to us that we have a sustainable business and share knowledge with others on how to make planet friendly choices.
“Our business was established to be a force for good and it is such an honour to have been recognised locally and nationally as an organisation that puts purpose before profit in everything we do”.
JOT’s Gallery:
JOT’s Gallery in Pateley Bridge is an art gallery dedicated to using recycled materials to showcase the environment.
James Owen Thomas, founder of the gallery, is an ambassador for the Young Tree Champion programme.
James has an artist residency in Fishpond Wood, Bewerley. He leads monthly workshops where he shares his techniques and offers ideas on how to become more creative with recycled materials.
James has also made multiple television and radio appearances discussing his passion for artwork and the environment.
James Owen Thomas said:
“We are all surrounded by the beauty of nature, and this has always been the deepest source of inspiration for me. In my efforts to protect the environment, I always choose to incorporate used materials into my art.
“I hope that my business values will encourage others to creatively recycle and reuse, so we can all do our part to save the planet”.
Number Thirteen
Number Thirteen is an eco-friendly coffee house in Knaresborough.
Everything at Number Thirteen is pre-loved, up-cycled or handmade. From teaspoons to wallpaper – it’s all been sourced from charity shops, auctions and boot fairs.
Supplies are kept local and any spare parts from deliveries, like milk bottles, are washed and reused or recycled, meaning a cup of coffee uses 0% single-use plastic.
The electricity used to power Number Thirteen is 100% renewable, generated from a combination of wind, solar and hydro energy.
Sarah Ward, owner of Number Thirteen, said:
“I wanted to try and create a business that strives to buck the single-use trend, using eco-friendly products that can be recycled or reused. I think we are living in a time where it would be irresponsible to not be aware of the impact we make on the environment.
“I strive to live a sustainable life at home, so why wouldn’t I do it at work too? Creating a business that puts sustainability at the forefront of its values, simply makes me feel better about my business and its overall impact on the environment”.
NEOM Organics London
NEOM Organics is an aromatherapy wellness brand based in Harrogate that has become a national brand.
NEOM is a certified B Corp organisation, an accolade that recognises UK businesses that place sustainability at the forefront of their values.
NEOM measures its significant environmental impacts, include packaging, water usage and ingredient sustainability, in order to establish an entirely green future.
The company has also calculated its carbon footprint and is actively developing a reduction plan.
Oliver Mennell, Co-Founder of NEOM, said:
“The NEOM team are delighted to be shortlisted as a finalist in the Sustainable Business Award. I want to credit the hard work and passion that everyone here has for building a business that doesn’t just look after the welfare of people, but also the wellbeing of our precious planet.
“As we say at Neom: “Let’s build a business we can all be super proud of”.
Source Climate Change Coffee
Source Climate Change Coffee is a conservation coffee company in Harrogate.
Source Climate Change Coffee sources its coffee globally. The company rewards farmers by buying their carbon offsets and then invests these into reforestation activities.
The company recently created a range of coffee capsules, made from entirely plant-based materials that are 100% compostable.
Source Climate Change also supports the Lorna Young Foundation to train farmers on their markets, climate change and sustainable land management practices.
Cristina Tales, Managing Director of Source Climate Change Coffee, said:
“This award recognises the work we have done in our supply chains for coffee. Source is the only conservation-led coffee company buying coffees from reforestation projects in ecological hotspots.
“Each coffee protects a tropical forest and supports a local conservation project, where farmers are encouraged to focus on organic and sustainable land management practices, as well as plant trees to ensure they have a sustainable source of firewood and building materials. The aim is to reduce their dependency on forests as a resource”.
Resurrected Bites
Resurrected Bites is a food waste organisation, with cafés in Harrogate and Knaresborough.
The business collects short shelf-life and excess food from local producers and distributes it via the pay as you feel community cafes.
Any food not fit for human consumption is passed onto livestock and peelings are gifted to allotments to make compost.
Resurrected Bites also uses the café and social media to educate people on climate change. In 2022, the business dedicated a week of its social media posts to educating people on how to reduce food waste at home.
Michelle Hayes, CEO of Resurrected Bites, said:
“Resurrected Bites is passionate about doing all we can to protect the environment.
“The reason I started the organisation is because food waste is such a massive environmental issue and, therefore, sustainability is always at the forefront of our minds when we are deciding how we operate in all areas of our organisation.”
EnviroVent
EnviroVent is a designer and manufacturer of sustainable ventilation systems.
The company has recently moved from two separate sites into one zero-carbon building in Harrogate. The building benefits from low carbon heating and energy sources, as well as solar panels.
EnviroVent has committed to planting 5,000 trees a year in partnership with MoreTrees.
EnviroVent also works with a waste management company to prioritise recycling.
Andy Makin, Managing Director of EnvrioVent, said:
“At EnviroVent, the “enviro” in our name is not just about improving the environment of our customers, but also in improving our environmental impact for the world we live in. We take responsibility to proactively tackle climate change and are committed to achieve Net-Zero targets by 2030!
“The first major milestone for the next stage in our sustainable journey was relocating to our carbon neutral head office. This new self-sustaining building, reduces our environmental impact, utilising greater energy efficient initiatives, including solar panels, the use of additional renewable energy sources e.g. heat recovery units”.
The Stray Ferret Business Award event sponsor is Prosperis. To find more and to purchase tickets for the big night, click here.
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- Rising Star Under 30 Award
- Inclusivity Award
- Digital Marketing Campaign Award
- Unsung Hero Award
- A prize fit for a president
The Rising Star Under 30 Award is sponsored by Thompson’s Chartered Accountants.
Thompsons in Harrogate provides key accountancy and taxation solutions to small and medium-sized businesses across England.
Thompsons has offered specialist advice across a range of sectors specific to business, growth plans, exit strategies and targets, for over 30 years.
The Rising Star under 30 Award is designed to highlight young business talent across the Harrogate who will be making waves in the years to come.
Finalists
Tiffany Snowden, Blue Willow Heritage:
Tiffany Snowden has excelled in what has traditionally been a male dominated profession.
She is Lead Heritage Consultant and Director of Harrogate environmental consultancy, Blue Willow Heritage.
Tiffany is just one of 500 women in the UK to be granted Membership of the Chartered Institute for Archaeologists (CifA), the highest level of accreditation that the most senior archaeology body in the UK offers.
Tiffany was also invited to join the Association for Studies in the Conservation of Historic Buildings (ASCHB), the UK’s premier body for the study of architectural preservation.
In just two years, Tiffany has led Blue Willow Heritage to become one of the top small heritage consultancies in Britain. The company is a preferred consultant for several respected planning and architectural firms within the UK, for North Yorkshire County Council and the Gotwick Manor Estate in Surrey.
Tiffany Snowden said:
“It’s an absolute honour to be shortlisted as a rising star, especially as a woman working in a male-dominated field.
“Being recognised in this way is not only a huge personal achievement, but also invaluable to help raise the profile of women in construction-related industries.”
Joe Andrew, Cocoa Joe’s:
Joe Andrew has literally brought the world of chocolate to Pateley Bridge as the Founder of Cocoa Joe’s, a retailer selling premium chocolate drinks.
Joe launched Cocoa Joe’s in 2019 after moving home from university. Four years later, the Pateley Bridge shop boasts the highest average customer review of any business in the UK, with the York branch ranking second.
Cocoa Joe’s uses luxury solid chocolate from all around the world. Customers are able to choose a chocolate, learn a little about the country of origin and see their bespoke drink form before their eyes.
Joe Andrew said:
“I’m absolutely over the moon to have made the shortlist, there has been a lot of very impressive applicants this year, so it still feels slightly surreal!
“This has been a great way to begin 2023 and will certainly be spurring me on as we begin to expand both our menu and range of products over the course of the coming year.”
Laura Mounsey, Harrogate Family Law:
Laura Mounsey only qualified as a solicitor with Harrogate Family Law four years ago and is already a director of the company. An equity stake in a law firm usually takes at least 10 years to achieve.
Laura is the Chair of the Advisory Board to the Independent Domestic Abuse Service (IDAS). This includes implementing the Domestic Abuse Act and shaping their policies on perpetrator schemes.
Laura is also the youngest ever president of the Harrogate & District Law Society. She has organised advocacy training via the local Judge, networking training and wellbeing sessions to support those struggling with working from home post-pandemic.
Laura’s clients describe her as “extraordinarily approachable and knowledgeable”.
Laura Mounsey said:
“I was honoured to find out that my team had submitted me for this award. I was even more surprised and overjoyed when I found out that I am shortlisted, especially in what I expect is a very competitive category.
“I feel very lucky to be where I am.”
James Owen Thomas, JOT’s Gallery:
James Owen Thomas is an environmental artist and owner of JOT’s Gallery.
James was diagnosed with autism aged three and has since used this, as well as his love for the environment, as a means of inspiration for his art. James uses recycled materials to create his artwork.
James is an ambassador the Tree Council, supporting their ‘Force For Nature’ campaign. He was nominated by the Tree Council for COP26 and then selected as a One Step Greener Ambassador for the UN Climate Change Conference 2021: “Together For Our Planet.”
In 2022, James’s artwork helped raise funds for The Alzheimer’s Society, Autism Trust, Disability Action Yorkshire, Horticap, Shelter, National Autistic Society, Harrogate Homeless Project and The Caudwell Children’s Charity.
James Owen Thomas said:
“It’s an honour to be shortlisted as a rising star. I’ve been working hard to create a sustainable practice by creating art using discarded materials, running workshops in the community, taking on commissions and opening my own gallery.
“I have faced several challenges during my life, but I see my autism as a gift – it gives me the strength to be different”.
The Stray Ferret Business Award event sponsor is Prosperis. To find more and to purchase tickets for the big night, click here.