A new social group has been set up for local women who live and work in the world of agriculture.
Flock Ladies, founded by Rachel Bain, invites women who have some involvement in the farming industry to get together and socialise.
Ms Bain told the Stray Ferret the new group is for people of “all sorts of backgrounds” and said it is not limited to those who live on a farm.
She said:
“Everyone is welcome: farmers, farmers’ wives or girlfriends, people that work in agriculture, women that are interested in farming or want to get into farming.
“Our members come from all over: Nidderdale, Masham, Ripon, Bedale and the surrounding areas.”
Flock Ladies will host monthly meetings, during which members will visit farms, attend workshops with gamekeepers, host socials, fundraisers and listen to guest speakers.
When asked why she set up the group, Ms Bain said:
“I wanted to create a social group for ladies who understand what it’s like to live and work in agriculture and to create an opportunity for them to get out and socialise. The pressures of farming can be difficult and many of the ladies juggle work, farms, families and are the backbone of their home life.
“Having a group of women who ‘get it’ and that monthly event to look forward to has been really well received. Being a part of Flock means that ladies commit to an evening out of their normal routine to have fun, catch up with friends and do something worthwhile.”
She said the group plans to meet on the last Thursday of each month. Flock Ladies does not have a fixed hub, Ms Bain said, adding that this is due to the group wanting to “get out and about to visit places”.
Ms Bain added:
“Our aim is to have fun, make great friends, learn lots, try new things, do a bit of good (e.g. support local causes) and most importantly have a laugh.
“We’re a newly established group and we’d love to grow our member numbers, so please keep an eye on our social media or get in touch with us to find out what we’ve got planned.
“We’re a really friendly bunch and anyone wanting to find out more is welcome to come along to a meeting before they commit to membership.”
A Flock Ladies membership costs £30 per year, plus £2.50 per meeting.
The group accepts women aged 18 and over.
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Summer timetable announced for Nidderdale Dales Bus
Summer timetables have been released for the Nidderdale Dales Bus service.
The 820 and 821 buses, which start in Keighley, will run on Sundays and bank holidays throughout the summer.
Both services will depart from Keighley Bus Station at 9.25am, through to Norwood, Fewston and Swinsty and Fewston reservoir via Otley.
The 820 service will terminate at Swinsty and Fewston, but the 821 will continue to Scar House reservoir via Blubberhouses, Greenhow Hill, Coldstones Cut and Pateley Bridge.
It will also stop in Wath, Ramsgill and Lofthouse before returning to Keighley from Scar House.
The service has been backed by Yorkshire Water’s beyond nature project.
The firm’s land and property lead surveyor, Lisa Harrowsmith, said:
“Yorkshire Water and Beyond Nature is pleased to continue its sponsorship of the DalesBus Nidderdale service which provides an important link to some of the beautiful attractions of the Washburn Valley and Upper Nidderdale areas.”
All single fares are capped at just £2 in line with the national initiative.
The Dales Bus summer timetable will be in place until October 20.
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Light pollution policy to protect Nidderdale dark skies
North Yorkshire Council is set to adopt a policy designed to prevent light pollution in Nidderdale.
Astronomers commissioned by Nidderdale AONB — which has since been renamed Nidderdale National Landscape — in spring 2022 found the night skies in the north west of the area, including Upper Nidderdale and moorland near Masham, are some of the least affected by light pollution in England.
With this in mind, the council drew up a Nidderdale AONB-specific supplementary planning document for its Harrogate District Local Plan 2014-35, which outlines where development can occur.
The policy was first devised by the former Harrogate Borough Council in February 2023. Senior councillors on North Yorkshire Council are now expected to adopt the plan.
The document, once adopted, will be used as a “material consideration” by councillors when deciding on planning applications in the area.
Among its key objectives include introducing a “zoning scheme” to protect the darker skies in Nidderdale.
It also recommends that external lights in the darkest zone, which includes Upper Nidderdale, should only have 500 lumens, which is a measurement of visible light to the human eye.
The document adds that light pollution from farm and commercial buildings is “the most obvious source” of light pollution in the darkest zone of the AONB.
Senior councillors will be asked to adopt the policy document at an executive meeting on May 7.
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Photo of the week: a rainbow over Fountains Earth Moor
This week’s photograph was taken by John Brown from Harrogate, capturing a rainbow over Fountains Earth Moor, near Ramsgill, Nidderdale.
Photo of the Week takes centre stage in our new-look nightly email newsletter. The newsletter drops into your inbox every evening at 6pm with all the day’s stories and more. To subscribe, click here.

(Image: John Brown)
Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week. We reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.
Pateley Bridge Art Club holds spring exhibitionPateley Bridge Art Club will hold its spring exhibition this weekend.
The amateur group, which was formed in 1994, recently celebrated its 30th anniversary and will continue the birthday celebrations with its bi-annual exhibition.
It will include work created by members, who meet monthly at Broadbent Hall in Glasshouses.
The group invites local artists to deliver talks and demonstrations, as well as holding outdoor sketching sessions around the local area.
The exhibition will include art created on a variety of mediums, including acrylic paintings, watercolours, drawings and sculpture.

Members’ work at a previous exhibition.
People can also enquire about buying some of the work displayed at the exhibition.
Audrey Culling, one of the club’s members, told the Stray Ferret:
“Having been a member of this club since its formation in 1994, I feel very proud of the wonderful, varied work that the members show.”
Ms Culling also said the group welcomes new members.
The Pateley Bridge Art Club spring exhibition will take place on Saturday, April 6, from 10am to 5pm. It will be held at the same time on Monday, April 8.
The exhibition is free to attend and the group said refreshments will be available.
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Nidderdale community group issues plea to find home for refugee family
A Nidderdale community group has issued a plea for help to find a refugee family a long-term home.
Nidderdale Community Welcome (NCW), a voluntary group established at the end of 2020, took to the local parish magazine to seek accommodation for a Syrian refugee family.
The group, which helped to find the family their current Nidderdale home, raised more than £13,000 by April 2022 to fund the initiative.
However, according to a local parish magazine, the family’s tenancy is due to end “in a few months”, and they are on the hunt for a new home.
The group said:
“The children have settled in at a local school, the parents have made good progress with learning English and have been seeking employment opportunities.
“The family would like to remain in the area, where they have been warmly welcomed and have settled well.”
Nidderdale Community Welcome issued a plea to anyone that knows of local rental properties, that would be suitable for the family, to get in touch.
The group said the family is looking for a two or three-bedroom house, which will soon become available, with a monthly rent in the region of £800 to £900.
It said anyone that may be able to help should call Bill Hickson on 07831809246, or email him at wgehickson@gmail.com.
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Summer Sunday buses across Nidderdale and Ripon to begin this weekend
Summer Sunday buses around Nidderdale will resume this weekend on Easter Sunday.
The Dales and Bowland Community Interest Company, which operates the DalesBus, has regular all-year bus services which are supplemented by additional weekend routes into and around Nidderdale National Landscape and the Yorkshire Dales in the summer months.
The services take people to popular locations for days out, including Fountains Abbey, Pateley Bridge and Fewston.
The extra services usually run between May and October but this year they will start early on March 31 and operate until October 20.
All single fares for bus journeys are £2 and £1 for under-19s as part of a national initiative, as reported by the Stray Ferret last week.
The Sunday and Bank Holiday DalesBus services restarting on Easter Sunday, March 31 are:
- 820 Keighley – Otley – Fewston
- 821 Keighley – Otley – Fewston – Pateley Bridge – Scar House
- 822 Pocklington – York – Ripon – Fountains Abbey – Pateley Bridge – Grassington
- 875 York – Leeds – Ilkley – Grassington – Buckden – Hawes
- 876 Leeds – Ilkley – Grassington – Buckden – Hawes
From Easter weekend there will also be revised summer timetables introduced on the following services:
- 856 Northallerton – Leyburn – Hawes
- 864 Bradford – Ilkley – Skipton – Malham
- 873 Ilkley – Bolton Abbey – Skipton
- 874 Wetherby – Leeds – Ilkley – Grassington – Buckden
Other Sunday services are set to begin in May with the 831 and 832 on Sunday, May 5. Details of other services restarting in May are not yet available.
Much of the Sunday DalesBus network is dependent on voluntary fundraising by the Dales and Bowland Community Interest Company.
Details of the Summer Sunday services are available here.
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Concerns raised about leadership at Nidderdale primary schools
A Nidderdale councillor has raised concerns about the leadership of two primary schools in the same federation as Fountains Earth in Lofthouse — which is set to officially close for good at the end of this month.
Fountains Earth is part of Upper Nidderdale Federation alongside St Cuthbert’s Church of England Primary School in Pateley Bridge and Glasshouses Community Primary School.
Last year, the governing board at Fountains Earth approached North Yorkshire Council to request a consultation on a proposal to close the school saying it had “exhausted all options” following dwindling pupil numbers.
The council’s executive approved the closure in January following a public consultation.
However, parents and former staff launched a petition calling for an investigation into the leadership of the federation which has been signed by 1,103 people.
Former Fountains Earth parent Fiona Ewbank addressed Skipton and Ripon councillors at a meeting on Thursday and said parents withdrew their children from the school after “losing trust” in the school’s leaders.
Stephen Ramsden from Upper Nidderdale Parish Council said losing the school was an “awful blow” to the community and that the same “poor management persists” at St Cuthbert’s.
Although there is no suggestion from the Conservative-run council that the schools in Pateley Bridge or Glasshouses are in danger of following the same fate as Fountains Earth, Cllr Andrew Murday, a Liberal Democrat who represents Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale, said it was a “problem” that the federation runs the two other schools.
He argued there isn’t a mechanism for the council to look into the governance of the federation.
Cllr Murday added:
“My anxiety is the same problems that arose at Fountains Earth will recur in the other two primary schools.”
Cllr Barbara Brodigan, a Liberal Democrat for Ripon Ure Bank and Spa, warned that a “pattern will be repeated” unless changes are made.
She said:
“Parents do vote with their feet. Schools with no pupils get no funding and it’s a downward spiral all the time.
“In some respects, the council is powerless to determine parents’ choices but I share your concerns that the same may happen again.”
Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith was questioned by Cllr Murday about the federation earlier in the meeting and said he “hadn’t heard any issues” regarding its other schools but said he would be happy to meet concerned parties.
The Local Democracy Reporting Service asked Upper Nidderdale Federation to respond to Cllr Murday’s comments on two occasions but we did not receive a reply.
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The Stray Ferret’s daily newsletter gets a fresh new look
As the Stray Ferret enters its fourth year of providing the best media coverage of the Harrogate district, we have given our daily newsletter a makeover.
The newsletter provides a round-up of what our journalists have been up to. The new look makes it easier than ever to get a snapshot of what is happening, with links to all the articles.
It includes a nightly introduction from Stray Ferret editor John Plummer as well as a round up of our daily news content, plus Photo of the Week, lifestyle features and in-depth topics.
Mr Plummer said:
“We hope the fresh new look appeals to readers. We are very grateful to everyone who reads the Stray Ferret and hope you continue to support independent local journalism in 2024.”
You can sign up here to the newsletter to keep up to date and get the latest news straight to your inbox.
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