Menwith Hill to expand with new ‘golf ball’

Harrogate Borough Council has granted the Ministry of Defence planning permission to build a new 30-metre high radome and electrical substation at RAF Menwith Hill.

It follows an application last year from the MoD to build three more radomes at the site, which was also passed.

There are now over 30 distinctive radomes, or “golf balls”, at the secretive site. The radomes are believed to house satellites and transmitters.

Washburn Parish Council said it was concerned by the expansion, as well as the detrimental visual impact created by the new radome.

However, it said it “recognises the important security roll” that Menwith Hill plays.


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In granting the application, council case officer Mike Parkes said the national security benefits of the radome outweighed its “harmful effects” on the Nidderdale landscape.

Built in the 1950s on the edge of Nidderdale, Menwith Hill is the United States’ largest overseas surveillance base.

Since 2000, protestors have taken part in a weekly demonstration outside Menwith Hill, which has been halted due to lockdown.

Sarah Swift, from the Menwith Hill Accountability Campaign group, said:

“We find the expansion of the site and of the base’s operations very worrying indeed.

“We believe that the activities of the base do not enhance the security of our area, our country or our world.”

Councillors vote to review future of Bewerley Park

Councillors sought to reassure the public over the future of Bewerley Park outdoor learning centre as they voted to support a review of its services today.

North Yorkshire County Council’s executive this afternoon amended a proposal to mothball the site near Pateley Bridge with immediate effect, saying it sent a negative message.

Instead, the executive agreed to “protect” the site by installing CCTV and other measures to keep it safe while out of use, following a break-in while it was closed.

However, with no sign of school visits resuming and likely limits to reduce the covid risk in future, the council said it still had to review the service and staffing levels, and bring back a business case for approval later in the year.

Cllr Patrick Mulligan, NYCC’s executive member for education and skills, said:

“We recognise the risk in the short term but, through the review, we are hoping to achieve a service that is sustainable for a long time into the future. This will require a review of all aspects of the service, including but not limited to staffing.

“The review, which will bring all stakeholders together, will evaluate the benefits of the service, taking into account making comparisons with the wider outdoor education market. The resulting business case aims to provide a sustainable operating model, balancing staffing, property and infrastructure costs.”

Bewerley Park

NYCC says Bewerley Park requires significant investment to meet modern educational needs. Photo: North Yorkshire Outdoor Learning Service.

Before voting, the executive heard from several speakers concerned about a recommendation to review the service and consult on its jobs. Among them were teachers and former pupils who had been to Bewerley Park and East Barnby, who emphasised the value offered by outdoor education and the growing need for it after a year of lockdowns impacting on children’s mental health.

Teacher Ian Bloor, from Eskdale School in Whitby, described the outdoor learning centres as the “jewel in the crown” of North Yorkshire education and said:

“I would like to make a heartfelt plea that any decisions made about the future of the service are made in the full knowledge of just how valuable and valued this service is.”

The meeting also heard from Cllr Stan Lumley, who represents the Pateley Bridge division on NYCC. He urged committee members not to rush into a decision while government support was still available, and with looming local government reorganisation which meant it was not yet clear who would be managing education services from next year.

Finally, Erica Carswell, the manager of Bewerley Park for more than 30 years until 2018, said closing the sites would mean losing the valuable skills and experience of the 42 staff.

It would also remove the option to use them for day visits or respite care for families with special needs in the summer and would discourage schools from booking residential visits for the coming months when covid restrictions would allow. She added:

“It would make better financial sense not to mothball the outdoor centres, but to keep them running at, say, a 50% staffing/capacity. The cost of mothballing is significant and doing so sends out a negative message to the general public and potential clients.”


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Cllr Mulligan told the committee the centres were not set up for day visits and any income would not be sufficient to cover costs, nor to invest in the buildings and facilities which had been needed for many years. He added:

“There’s a misperception that we are looking to close these outdoor education centres. What we are attempting to do is to have a review of them to make them more sustainable.”

The committee heard that, with a projected loss of nearly £1 million in the current financial year, the council had been able to recoup money from government schemes to protect jobs and services, reducing the loss to just over £200,000. However, there was no guarantee the schemes would continue to run beyond their current end dates of March and June.

The outdoor education service had run at a loss of around £50,000 per year for the last five years before the coronavirus crisis, the committee was told.

Cllr Michael Harrison, who represents the Lower Nidderdale and Bishop Monkton division, said the value of the service had to be taken into account as part of the review of its finances:

“Many of the services councils provide, technically, will run at a loss and I prefer to look at it more as an investment…

“Most council leisure centres technically will run at a loss, most libraries will run at a loss, but I view it not so much as a loss but an investment in that service.”

Councillors voted unanimously to support the proposal to introduce short-term protective measures for both Bewerley Park and East Barnby, to review the services and report back later in the year, and to begin consulting with staff over the potential loss of jobs.

‘Nobody need go hungry’ in lockdown, say Nidderdale churches

A helping hand is being extended to people struggling to make ends meet in Nidderdale.

The cumulative financial impact of the Covid-19 lockdowns is taking its toll on families and individuals.

The Vicar of St Cuthbert’s, the Rev Darryl Hall, is involved with the informal foodbank service based in Pateley Bridge.

He told the Stray Ferret:

“We are currently very well-placed to assist anybody who is in need of help.

“We receive incredible support from the local community – churchgoers and non-churchgoers alike.

“The shops in Pateley Bridge  have been brilliant in supporting a food voucher scheme we introduced. Morrisons Supermarket in Ripon regularly gives us food and other essential items – such as cleaning products.”

He added:

“Our aim is to ensure that people do not go without food. Nobody in Nidderdale need go hungry.”

Photo of Sarah Jones collecting items from Morrisons Supermarket Ripon

Foodbank supporter Sarah Jones collecting items donated by Morrisons in Ripon (Photograph: Morrisons Supermarkets)

Rev Hall has charge of six parishes in a 100-square mile area stretching from Low Laithe to Middlesmoor.

He pointed out:

“The need is clearly there, as families and individuals find themselves having to make difficult financial decisions.

“We are here and able to help, thanks to the tremendous assistance from Bewerley Park outdoor learning centre and its staff.

“They have provided a much-valued storage facility that enables us to have plenty of food items available.”

The service is confidential, discreet and available to anybody – believers and non-believers alike.

The foodbank service has been extended to the neighbouring parish of Dacre with Hartwith and Darley with Thornthwaite.


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Alastair Ferneley, the vicar of Holy Trinity Church, Dacre Banks, told his parishioners:

“As the pandemic continues, we are aware that some people will not getting an income and may need some short-term support.

“Please do use this service to avoid getting into debt, or to lessen debt problems.”

Anybody requiring assistance can call Rev Hall on 01423 711414, Rev Ferneley on 01423 780262, or Nidderdale Plus on 01423 714953.

Parts of Harrogate district miss out on vaccine centre pledge

Those north of Ripon and living in large parts of Nidderdale are missing out on the government’s vaccine centre pledge.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has promised that everyone will be within 10 miles of a vaccine centre, but there is still work to do in North Yorkshire.

A map released as part of the UK Covid-19 vaccines delivery plan shows that, while there are two centres in Harrogate, there are no places to get a jab in Ripon or Nidderdale.

Residents in Masham currently have to travel to Leyburn or Northallerton if the NHS calls upon them to be vaccinated.

With the elderly and vulnerable first in line for a vaccine, the government believes that it is important they do not have to travel far.

96% of England’s population currently has a vaccine centre within 10 miles but the government hopes to increase that to 100% by the end of January.


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Its vaccine delivery plan outlines how 206 hospital hubs, 1,200 local vaccination sites and 50 large vaccination centres should be able to make that a reality.

The plan also reveals how in “highly rural areas,” where public transport is an issue, the local vaccination centre will be a mobile unit.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said in a government press conference yesterday:

“The third part of the plan is expanding where you can get vaccinated. As of Friday, 96% of the population in England lived within 10 miles of a vaccination site and we’re expanding the number of vaccination sites further, right across the whole of the UK.

“This expansion will include community pharmacy and roving vaccination centre on top of the hospitals and GP practices and the seven mass vaccination sites that we’ve opened.

“This huge expansion means that by the end of January, everyone will live within 10 miles of a vaccination centre either fixed or roving.”

Have you or a relative struggled to get to the vaccination centre? We’d like to hear from you. Get in touch on contact@thestrayferret.co.uk

Yorkshire Dales dark skies festival moves online

The Yorkshire Dales has been forced to move its first dark skies festival online since joining the international dark sky list.

With the third national lockdown, it means that people will be unable to travel to Yorkshire for the annual event between February 12 and 28.

Organisers had already been planning some virtual events but will now need to expand that offering because of coronavirus.

It will include a mixture of free and paid for events through webinars and over platforms like zoom.

When the organisers held the first virtual fringe dark skies festival in October they had a “considerable audience.” They are hoping for a repeat or even better this time.


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Scientists will be among the “stellar” line-up of speakers. They will share the latest cosmic discoveries and space developments, including NASA landing on Mars.

Astronomers will give people a tour of the night sky before encouraging them to look out on their front doors.

The full moon will appear in the second week of the festival, so experts are planning a live “moonwatch” with an informal questions and answers session.

On other evenings people will be able to watch wildlife and conservation experts as they explain the importance of conserving our night skies.

Photographers will also be on hand to share their top tips for taking great images of the night sky like the picture above.

Helen Dalton, tourism officer for the Yorkshire Dales National Park said:

“We first introduced a small virtual programme of events during last October’s fringe festival and had a considerable audience so we’re confident that a similar format on a larger scale this February will be even more popular particularly as it will help fire people’s imaginations to go outside and view the skies above where they live.”

Emily Watson, visitor development and marketing assistant at the North York Moors National Park added:

“There is something very special about spending time under our night skies which are so pristine more than 2,000 stars can be seen in one go and where a walk or run becomes a thrilling adventure when you venture out into a beautiful landscape after twilight.

“This is why we’re keen to use the virtual festival to help open people’s eyes to the possibilities of experiencing something so awe-inspiring both on their own doorstep and once lockdown restrictions are eased and we can welcome visitors again.”

Pateley’s Harefield Hall determined to survive a year of blows

Elaine Little was looking forward with optimism to 2020, which was shaping up to be a record year for Harefield Hall.

The four-star country guest house in Pateley Bridge, with its restaurant, bar, 14 en-suite rooms and bunk room for groups of cyclists and other travellers, had record bookings.

Then came covid and the first lockdown in March, which proved to be just the precursor to nine months of stop-start misery for the hall, which once belonged to the Archbishop of York.

Ms Little, the director of the hall, told the Stray Ferret:

“Just as we prepared to come out of the first lockdown and were getting ready for re-opening, a cloudburst on 28 June devastated the building.

“The rainstorm was so severe that the gutters and fall pipes were overwhelmed and the ingress of water damaged ceilings, furniture and carpets.”

The insurance claim is still to be resolved, as the pandemic has delayed the settlement processes.

The damage caused in June meant the hall could not reopen in July. Accommodation and restaurant bookings were lost, as were bar takings.

Harefield Hall

Harefield Hall once belonged to the Archbishop of York.

The premises remained closed until mid-October, then within a fortnight of reopening the second lockdown in November, effectively wiped out the pre-Christmas trade.

Now the third lockdown has dealt another huge body blow. Ms Little said:

“We’ve gone from crisis to crisis, unable to make any money to cover our overhead costs and trying to survive on a small discretionary grant and a bounce-back loan, that will need to be repaid.

“It’s so ironic, because at the beginning of 2020 we had record bookings – more than 50 per cent up on our previous best year.”

In spite of all this, Ms Little is determined that a rainstorm and three lockdowns will not blow her and her remaining team of four off-course.


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She said:

“In business, you must remain positive and focused and we are determined to turn things around because we have total belief in what we are doing here.

“We hope a similar change of fortune is not far away for other small businesses in the Pateley Bridge area – some of whom are among our suppliers.”

Amid the countless calls to insurers and suppliers, Ms Little is looking to the future.

She sees potential in attracting more cyclists who are seeking hospitality and an overnight stay at Harefield, with its woodland and riverside setting.

Nature lovers, looking for the abundant variety of birds that are attracted to Nidderdale’s natural environment, also offer business opportunities, as does the opening later this year of a self-catering holiday cottage within Harefield’s grounds.

Police name couple who died near Pateley Bridge

North Yorkshire Police has named the couple who died at their home near Pateley Bridge last week.

Frank and Anne Woods, aged 75 and 79, were found on December 30 after a concerned neighbour rang the police.

Police cordoned off the scene following the incident in Blazefield in the Nidderdale town.

However, officers have struggled to reach any next of kin and have appealed for help.


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Mr Woods was originally from the United States so may have relatives there.

North Yorkshire Police do no believe there to be any suspicious circumstances surrounding the deaths.

Anyone who can help identify next of kin should contact the police on 101 or +44 1904 618691 internationally, quoting reference number 12200247502.

Stunning Harrogate district walks included in new guide

Walks around Pateley Bridge, Ripon, Boroughbridge and Harrogate are among those included in a new campaign to promote Yorkshire as the walking capital of the world.

The year-long initiative, known as Walkshire, began yesterday. It includes 365 walks in God’s own county — one for every day of the year.

Tourism agency Welcome to Yorkshire, which is behind the campaign, hopes it will encourage more people to discover Yorkshire’s spectacular scenery and history on foot.

Routes in the Harrogate district include:

53 miles of the Nidderdale Way

14 miles Bramhope to Harrogate via Arthington viaduct

9 miles Ripon to Fountains Abbey

8 miles Hackfall woods near Masham

5 miles Thruscross reservoir

6.5 miles Burton Leonard, Copgrove and South Stainley

2 miles Ripon canal

The routes can be viewed here:

Arthington viaduct. Credit: Welcome to Yorkshire

James Mason, chief executive of Welcome to Yorkshire, said:

“2020 has been a tricky year for all and certainly a time to reflect on the importance of health and well-being so what better way to start the new year and continue through 2021 than promoting walking in Yorkshire to the world and welcoming visitors to the most diverse of counties.”

The campaign features a daily walk and businesses can sponsor and nominate routes.

There are four big seasonal walks and special plans for Yorkshire Day on August 1, as well as a Tour de Walkshire to replace the postponed Tour de Yorkshire cycle race.

People are invited to participate in Walkshire by sharing their own favourite walks using the hashtag #Walkshire.

Harrogate-based Yorkshire Cancer Research is the official charity partner of Walkshire.

No suspicious circumstances in Pateley Bridge couple’s death

North Yorkshire Police has said there are not believed to be any suspicious circumstances surrounding the deaths of an elderly couple in Pateley Bridge.

Officers discovered the bodies at 1.30pm on Wednesday after being contacted by a concerned member of the public.

The police said the man died of natural causes and the woman’s death is at the moment unexplained. Both were in their 70s.

Police cordoned off the scene following the incident in Blazefield in the Nidderdale town.

Enquiries are ongoing to trace the next of kin for the man and the woman.


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Pateley Bridge: no covid cases for 10 days but pubs stay shut

According to government statistics, there has not been a single new covid infection for at least 10 days in Pateley Bridge and nearby Nidd Valley.

Yet it seems many pubs in the Nidderdale town, which were hoping for a pre-Christmas boost after a dire year, are set to stay shut on Wednesday when lockdown ends.

Dan Elliot, general manager of the Royal Oak, sums up the frustration:

“Unless we go into tier 1 we will stay shut.

“The rules don’t suit small businesses like us. It seems they are making it viable for big chain pubs but the rules absolutely don’t work for your little country pub like us.”

The Royal Oak, which has four staff, serves meals so could open. But social distancing guidelines make it pointless, says Mr Elliot.

“There’s no way whatsoever to make it profitable.

“We’ve always had a good food trade but it’s more of a drinkers’ pub. For a pub that relies predominantly on locals and drinkers you have no hope.

“Unless you have space for loads of tables, or try and cheat the rules by doing cheap substantial meals, it’s just not viable.”


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The pub, which spent £300 putting up plastic screens in the bar and also erected sheltering to encourage customers to go outdoors, is a key part of the community.

Takeaway meals served at weekends during lockdown have been a lifeline to many older people.

It plans to continue selling weekend takeaways as well as providing £8 oven-ready Christmas Day meals.

But nobody knows when it will welcome locals, cyclists and walkers back through its doors — and this isn’t easy to accept in a place where there has not been a single new infection for almost two weeks. Mr Elliot says:

“We’ve done test and trace and we have not had any cases yet. I believe only one pub or restaurant in Pateley has had a case and it shut straight away and did a deep clean.

“It does feel a little bit like the blanket restrictions just don’t seem to fit pubs like us.”

Mr Elliot says he isn’t aware of any Pateley pubs that are re-opening.

“Covid had already taken all the enjoyment out of running a pub because we spend more time telling customers off for doing wrong things rather than asking how their day is. Now it’s taken the profitability out of it.

“Eat Out to Help Out was really good but since then it’s just slowly dwindled.

“If we go to tier 1 we could be OK because we could have up to six people at a table so we could have 36 people inside and 36 outside.

“We are expecting a bit of a backlash for not opening when we could but I don’t think people realise it isn’t financially viable.”

The Stray Ferret asked Julian Smith, whose Skipton and Ripon constituency includes Pateley Bridge, what his message was for small businesses struggling in tier two and whether he supported the government approach. He had not replied by time of publication.