Knaresborough Town Council has allocated £7,000 towards training tour guides to promote the town.
Knaresborough is a popular destination but visitors sometimes struggle to find basic information on attractions such as the museum and viaduct.
Cllr Margy Longhurst, a professionally trained tourist guide, began providing free tours last year.
But Cllr Longhurst wants to develop the service, which it is hoped will boost tourism and increase civic pride.
The council agreed this week to budget £7,000 towards training a pool of guides, who will provide free tours on Wednesday market days and at weekends, as well as on special occasions.
Knaresborough-born Sarah Cowling, who is now a professional tourist guide in York who also provides accredited training, will run the courses.
The 13-week training course will start in January and it is hoped the first guides will be in action by autumn next year.
Speaking after the town council meeting, Cllr Longhurst said:
“I’ve found it frustrating doing the tours because trying to do everything myself is just too much. I’ve also sprained my knee.
“We want to have regular free walking tours and when I say ‘free’, I mean ‘free’ — we won’t be asking for tips.”
Besides tourists, she said the tours would also appeal to newcomers to the town by making them “feel part of the community” as well as informing them of Knaresborough’s heritage.
Cllr Longhurst said the council was looking to recruit eight to 10 people with a love of history and Knaresborough who were prepared to undertake training and two exams.
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Green grants
Knaresborough Town Council is to award grants to young people with ideas on how to improve the environment.
The Green Grant will be awarded to school pupils or youth groups with ideas on how to better Knaresborough’s environment and work towards reversing the effects of climate change in the area.
The council said people with ideas on active travel, climate adaptation, improving animal and wildlife habitats, energy reduction and minimising pollution are welcome to apply for a grant, which will be up to £500 per project.
Kit Lacey, chair of the council’s climate committee, said the authority “understands that things cannot stay the same” and is “in need of young people’s help”.
Mr Lacey added:
“It’s the young people of the town who will live with the effects of climate change longer than us councillors.
“This programme is open to all children of the town and welcomes applications from adults and children in schools and all types of youth groups. Examples would be school groups, young climate committees lead by PTA members, scouts and guides.
“We encourage groups to apply even if they are not sure where the group may sit as we, the council, can push them in the right direction of coming under a group that would be eligible.”
Although the scheme is directed at young people, Mr Lacey said the grant must be awarded to an adult in charge of an organisation, so the money can be sent to their account.
Applicants must also disclose the organisation’s latest financial accounts and, if necessary, any permissions required by North Yorkshire Council.
Knaresborough Town Council also said applicants must mention ‘Green Grant’ in their application.
You can apply for the grant here.
Council-owned Brimhams Active to spend £8,000 on staff awards partyCouncil leisure company Brimhams Active is to spend at least £8,000 of public money on a staff awards ceremony this weekend.
Brimhams operates all leisure provision in the Harrogate district on behalf of North Yorkshire Council, including leisure centres in Harrogate, Ripon Knaresborough and Pateley Bridge, as well as Starbeck Baths.
A source alerted the Stray Ferret to Sunday’s event at the Pavilions of Harrogate. They added:
“I would think as a North Yorkshire Council-owned company, the council taxpayers’ money they have left at the end of a financial year would go back to the council rather than finding an excuse to spend it, particularly given the increases we’ve all had on our council tax bills this week.”

The new Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre
The Stray Ferret contacted North Yorkshire Council for further details of the event, including the cost.
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, initially said costs had been “kept to a minimum by suppliers sponsoring the awards” but did not disclose a figure.
He added:
“Our annual people awards event is a fabulous opportunity to recognise and celebrate effort and achievement.
“The event itself helps our people who work day-to-day across different facilities to come together and connect. It plays a huge part in boosting morale, which in turn helps enhance workforce productivity.
“Up to 200 members of our team will attend the awards event at the Pavilions of Harrogate.”
When pressed for a figure, Mr Tweedie said:
“The venue hire and food is charged at £40 per person and we have 200 people attending. We are very careful in how we manage our budget. We believe this is a sound, proportionate investment in our people that helps to optimise people recruitment, retention and productivity for a business with a circa £8 million turnover.
“This investment serves to acknowledge and celebrate outstanding team and individual efforts that have delivered remarkable results, including overachieving in relation to footfall and budget and achievement of national accreditations (Quest and Water Wellbeing) within 2.5 years of the company’s inception.”
He added “the decorations are provided by staff” and the photographer and DJ were “providing their services in kind”.
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Brimhams to be abolished
Brimhams Active, which was set-up up by the now defunct Harrogate Borough Council, is due to be abolished after executive councillors decided to bring leisure provision back in-house in January.
The council’s current portfolio, which includes 19 leisure centres, 16 swimming pools, three wellbeing hubs, a nursery and Harrogate’s Turkish Baths, is run by five different operators.
But despite councillors stating the existing Brimhams model is “particularly advanced”, the leisure shake-up will see all these services moved to a single in-house operation.
The local authority believes the new structure will see a greater focus on health and wellbeing, provide more opportunities for people to participate and will focus on addressing inequalities.
It hopes the transition will be complete by 2028.
Irish firm revives name of collapsed Flaxby housebuilder Ilke Homes
Collapsed local modular housebuilding firm Ilke Homes‘ name has been brought back to life.
The company, based alongside the A1(M) at Flaxby near Knaresborough, ceased trading and entered administration last June with the loss of more than 1,000 job losses and debts of £320 million.
Government housing agency Homes England, which was owed an estimated £68.7 million, was among the substantial list of creditors. Employee claims were reported to be more than £720,000, while HMRC was owed £2.1 million and unsecured creditors’ debt at the company totalled £249.3 million.
However, Irish company Homespace Residential Limited is now using the Ilke Homes name.
The Stray Ferret understands Homespace bought some of Ilke Homes’ assets in October last year, including some inventory items and the intellectual property, which gives it the right to use the firm’s name and logo.
The home page of the Ilke Homes website how contains information about Homespace.
It says:
“Homespace was born through the completion of a strategic asset purchase agreement, taking ownership of Ilke’s trademarks, design IP, modular stock and technology patents.”
It goes on to say Ilke Homes “delivered over 1,000 high-quality energy-efficient homes” during its six-year lifespan and that Homespace has “proven built designs available for nine core house types”.
AlixPartners UK, which was appointed liquidator last year, said Ilke Homes faced “challenges of unprecedented inflation and a lack of land supply linked to planning processes”.
The firm told the Stray Ferret today it was still acting as liquidators for Ilke Homes, but declined to comment further.
The Stray Ferret reported in August that more than 600 former employees of the company were to take legal action over the handling of the redundancy process.
We contacted Homespace to find out more about the acquisition but did not receive a response by the time of publication.
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Dog attacks child outside Knaresborough school
North Yorkshire Police has appealed for witnesses after a dog attacked a child outside a school in Knaresborough.
In a statement this afternoon, the force said the dog was tied to a fence outside the front gate of St Mary’s Catholic Primary School on Tentergate Road when it bit the child.
The incident happened on Wednesday, March 13 at school pick-up time.
The child required hospital treatment for what police described as “minor injuries”.
The statement said:
“Dog owners are urged take responsibility for their pets. Please do not leave dogs tied up and unattended around school premises near where young children may be playing.”
Anyone who saw the incident or knows the dog owner is urged to contact North Yorkshire Police by calling 101, or emailing jack.bocking@northyorkshire.police.uk, quoting reference 12240045161.
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Car park charges to rise by up to 25% in Harrogate district
North Yorkshire Council is set to increase car park charges across the Harrogate district by up to 25%.
Notices have been put up announcing new prices for off-street parking from April 19.
People parking at Conyngham Hall in Knaresborough for short periods look set to be hardest hit, with the cost of one hour and two hour parking going up by 25%. Most other price hikes are around 20%.
It is not known whether on-street parking charges will also increase. The council is expected to issue a media statement this week.
According to the notices, the affected car parks in Harrogate are Dragon Road, Montpellier Shoppers on The Ginnel, Odeon and Park View, West Park and Station Parade. The multi-storey car parks are not mentioned.

The Montpellier Shoppers car park on The Ginnel.
The cost of an annual permit to park at the Odeon and The Ginnel will shoot up from £756 to £907.20 and £1,425.60 to £1,710.72 respectively.
The affected car parks in Knaresborough are Castle Yard, Chapel Street and Fisher Street, Conyngham Hall, Waterside and York Place.
An annual permit at York Place will rise from £270 to £324.
Notices displayed in car parks state the changes come under the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984, which ‘provides that a local authority may vary the charges to be paid in connection with the use of its off‐street parking places by notice’.
It comes despite the council increasing council tax bills by 4.99% in 2024/25.
It means the amount paid by an average Band D property for council services will increase by £87.80 to £1,847.62.
The council faces a shortfall of more than £30 million for the next financial year.
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Cycling infrastructure in Harrogate and Knaresborough ‘absolutely terrible’
Councillors have criticised North Yorkshire Council for not prioritising the needs of cyclists in Harrogate.
At a meeting of Harrogate and Knaresborough councillors, Alex Kay, the council’s senior transport planning officer delivered a presentation that included options for future cycle links in the town.
These included Bilton to Starbeck and Jennyfields to the town centre with cost estimates running into the millions.
In recent years the council has built a widely-criticised stretch of cycle route on Otley Road and abandoned the next phase, scrapped a Low-Traffic Neighbourhood on Beech Grove and decided against creating a one-way system on Oatlands Drive.
Meanwhile, funding bids have been rejected by the government for new cycle paths on Knaresborough Road and Victoria Avenue.
Its flagship active travel scheme, the £12.1m Harrogate Station Gateway, has also been drastically scaled back following opposition from local businesses with only a small section of Station Parade now set to include a cycle lane.
Cllr Matt Walker, a Liberal Democrat for Knaresborough West, criticised the state of the cycle infrastructure in the area.
He said:
“To improve things you have to acknowledge there’s a problem. Active travel is absolutely terrible. Roads are gridlocked and full of potholes, buses are missed all the time between Harrogate and Knaresborough.
“We have to make improvements and the council needs to step its game up. It needs to get its act together so people can get out of cars and get around in a quick and environmentally-friendly way.”
Cllr Arnold Warneken, a member of the Green Party for Ouseburn, added:
“The frustration of people who want to cycle in Harrogate and Knaresborough isn’t being taken seriously.”
With several of the proposals put forward by the council years from being built, Cllr Paul Haslam, an Independent for Bilton and Nidd Gorge, said there are not enough “shovel-ready” schemes on the table.
The council’s predecessor North Yorkshire County Council undertook a much-publicised Harrogate Congestion Survey in 2019 which showed there was an appetite for improving walking and cycling infrastructure in the town so people are incentivised to leave their cars at home.
Cllr Philip Broadbank, a Liberal Dem for Fairfax and Starbeck, said:
“I get frustrated with talks and plans and various things we spend time preparing [regarding cycling] yet year-in-year-out nothing happens.”
However, Cllr John Mann, a Conservative for Oatlands and Pannal, defended the council and said it “hadn’t done a bad job” on active travel in his constituency.
Cllr Mann said:
“They’ve installed numerous cycle lanes, several 20mph zones, and school streets. The gateway scheme has not been without teething problems and it’s progressing.
“We shouldn’t be too hard on the highways team. The bigger picture is difficult on financing and funds. Costs of construction projects have gone up enormously and inflation is huge.”
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Harrogate district buses to cap youth fares at £1
Bus fares for young people in the Harrogate district will be capped at £1 as part of a one-year pilot scheme.
North Yorkshire Council’s executive members yesterday accepted £3.5 million of funding from the Department for Transport’s (DfT) Network North Bus Service Improvement Plan, which will be used to introduce the scheme.
The pilot will include expanded bus timetables, improvements to bus shelters and £1 travel fares.
£2.1 million of the money, which has been allocated to local authorities in the north and the midlands after plans for the HS2 rail project were halted, will fund additional weekday bus services during peak times across three Harrogate district routes.
These include:
- Services 21 and 22, which runs from Knaresborough to York via Ripon and surrounding villages.
- Service 70, which runs from Ripon to Northallerton.
- Service 1, which runs from Harrogate to Knaresborough via Aspin, Carmines, Starbeck and the Pastures.
A further £715,000 of the funding will be used to provide £1 bus fares for people aged under 19, which will apply county-wide, while £158,000 will be used to hire more staff to improve boarding times and information services at bus stations across the Harrogate and Scarborough districts.
Maintaining and improving bus stops, additional cleaning services and repairs to Ripon bus station’s waiting facilities will also fall under the scheme at a cost of £76,000.
Cllr Keane Duncan, the council’s executive member for highways and transport, said:
“As a result of our efforts, bus services in North Yorkshire have seen a significant reversal of fortune since the Covid-19 pandemic.
“Passenger numbers are up and we’ve protected at-risk services. Now, I am pleased we can go further.
“With £3.5 million of extra funding, we are able to introduce lower fares for under-19s, invest in bus stops and fund expanded routes in all corners of the county.
“This is very welcome news for passengers, but it is of course vital that services are supported so they can continue in the longer term.”
The council has urged the public to “get on board with the pilot” to ensure the services will continue beyond 2025.
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5 things to do in and around Harrogate this weekend from 22-24 March
Get out and about with our guide of the top activities and things to do this weekend.
Play crazy golf at a movie-themed course in the Yorkshire Dales
At The Stray Ferret we like to publish events that are slightly out of the ordinary – and if a movie-themed crazy golf experience isn’t that, then we don’t know what is.
Taking place at Uredale Mill in the picturesque Dales village of Askrigg, channel your inner Happy Gilmore and get competitive with friends and family on this 18-hole course that’s themed around films.
Dance the can-can at the Moulin Rouge or get a miserly score that would make The Grinch proud. This fun activity is one to pop on the weekend list – or as it runs for two weeks, it could be one for the Easter holidays too.
Children under 12 £8, adults £10, discounts for group bookings are available – email tickets@incredibleartists.uk, various time slots, March 23 – April 7, Uredale Mill (ex Carrs Billington Yard), Station Road, Askrigg, DL8 3HZ.
Listen to the soundtracks of the silver screen performed by a live orchestra

(Image: London Concertante)
This week’s ‘5 things to do in and around Harrogate’ has a slight film feel (Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire is also being released on 22 March, 40 years after the original – book your tickets at The Everyman or The Odeon), while Ripon Cathedral is also hosting a Music from the Movies by Candlelight, performed by London Concertante.
Be mesmerised by the orchestra who will play some of the most iconic film scores of all time, including the suave sophistication of James Bond, the ethereal sounds of ET and the dark allure of The Godfather, to name but a few.
From £19, March 23, Ripon Cathedral, Liberty Court House, Minster Road, Ripon HG4 1QT.
Visit Knaresborough Wellness Festival

(Image: Pixaby)
Think about your mind, body and soul at Knaresborough Wellness Festival, which is being held for the fourth year running. Featuring something for everyone including treatments such as reflexology, aromatherapy, reiki, and Indian head massage, to live music, aura photography and tarot card reading, you’ll be sure to find your inner zen here.
There will also be activities such as yoga, workshops and talks so you can learn more about a wide variety of wellness practices, and there will also be plenty of crystals too.
Free, March 24, 10am-4pm, Knaresborough Wellness Festival, Henshaws Arts & Crafts Centre, 50 Bond End, Knaresborough, HG5 9AL.
Go to Springtime Live at the Great Yorkshire Showground

(Image: Springtime Live)
The event for all the family is back. This year attendees won’t be disappointed as there will be a spaniel dog show, a crazy climbing wall, Mini Land Rover rides, tractor trailer rides and a sheep show. That’s not to mention all farm animals you could possibly imagine, as well as hands-on workshops and demonstrations, which are just some of this year’s highlights.
And once you’re inside the event, all of the attractions are free. Bonus. Be quick though as some of the tickets have already sold out.
Pre-booking is necessary, children £8, adults £12, March 23, Great Yorkshire Showground, Harrogate, HG2 8NZ.
Meet the extreme artist and explorer Philip Gray

(Image: Philip Gray)
Irish artist Philip Gray combines his love of painting with his passion for exploration and discovery. He often embarks on challenging expeditions for his art and paints these scenes from across the world, whether it’s tropical rainforests or icy mountain peaks.
Join him at Clarendon Fine Art Gallery where he will launch his Harrogate exhibition and tell the tales of some of the adventures he’s been on. It’s sure to make for an awe-inspiring evening.
Free, 6-8pm, March 23, Clarendon Fine Art, 1a James Street, Harrogate, HG1 1QS.
Do you have an event that you’d like us to potentially feature in the future? Drop me an email at francesca@thestrayferret.co.uk
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Concern as school suspensions rise by 40% in Harrogate and Knaresborough
Concerns have been raised after the number of children suspended in Harrogate and Knaresborough schools rose by more than 40% in the last year.
Figures recently published by North Yorkshire Council revealed there were 459 suspensions in 2022/23 — a rise from 314 in the previous year.
The most common reason for suspensions was “persistent disruptive behaviour”, according to a report.
The chief inspector of Ofsted has said that behaviour in schools has deteriorated since the covid pandemic, with some pupils refusing to comply with rules, talking back to teachers and walking out of class mid-lesson.
The topic was raised at a meeting of local councillors in Harrogate on Thursday.
Cllr Paul Haslam, an independent representing Bilton and Nidd Gorge, said he was “concerned” at the level of suspensions in the area.
He said:
“What we’ve got is a symptom and not a cause. I’m keen to understand the causes of suspensions. I do not underestimate the commitment of teachers.
“As a past school governor and trustee, I know how hard they work but how can we best support them? Can we catch [poor behaviour] at primary school so it doesn’t happen in secondary school?”
Last week, youth education charity Impetus published research that found children suspended from school see their exam results suffer.
It suggested some children were found to be lagging a year behind their peers with some unable to achieve a standard pass in GCSE maths and English.
Amanda Newbold, assistant director for education and skills at North Yorkshire Council, responded to Cllr Haslam and said the rise in suspensions reflected a national trend.
She also said the figures were “linked disproportionately” to children with special educational needs and disabilities.
Ms Newbold said:
“What we’ve seen is an increase in suspensions and exclusions across the county. Those numbers have risen over the last few years. We can link it back to wider issues in families rather than school-specific issues.
“We’ve focused on all things inclusion this academic year and are offering support around suspension and exclusions. We’ve had headteacher workshops to make sure we can do as much preventative work as possible but it will take time to see outcomes.”
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Four fire crews tackle blaze at Pateley Bridge caravan site
Four fire crews were called to a blaze at a caravan site in Pateley Bridge in the early hours of this morning.
Firefighters from Knaresborough, Grassington, Ripon and Harrogate rushed to the scene at 1.12am on Monday, March 18.
An investigation into the cause of the fire at the unnamed site is ongoing, North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service said.
A spokesperson added:
“The fire caused damage to a toilet block at the site with an attached workshop also suffering slight fire damage. Crews prevented the fire spreading any further.”

Fire crews extinguishing the flames in Pateley Bridge
Grassington Fire Station posted on social media:
“In the early hours we were sent to a building fire near Pateley Bridge alongside, Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough Fire Station.
Crews worked hard to prevent the fire taking the adjoining building before extinguishing the flames.”

The campsite engulfed in smoke

Grassington fire services at the scene last night

The wreckage at Pateley Bridge Caravan site
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