Bike Bus comes to HarrogateBusiness Breakfast: Grantley Hall opens Nordic Spa Garden

Staff well-being and culture have rapidly risen up the priority list for many employers.  At the next Stray Ferret Business Club  we’ll hear from award winning employer, LCF Law, on how organisations can ensure their teams are productive and happy. 

The lunch event is lunch at Manahatta, on June 29th at 12.30pm. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.


Luxury hotel Grantley Hall has opened a Nordic Spa Garden, which has ice baths and an outdoor steam sauna.

The garden has two ice baths where guests at the 47-bed hotel near Ripon can try cold-water immersion therapy.

The sauna, on the other hand, allows people to enjoy warmth in a picturesque outdoor setting.

Gillian McGraffin, spa and wellness manager at Grantley Hall, said:

“We have worked hard to create a relaxing outdoor area that not only looks beautiful but also provides guests with a range of health benefits.”


Dental practice takes oral hygiene message to schools

Oral health educators from Coppice View Dentalcare have been handing out free toothbrushes, tooth paste and brushing charts in local schools in support of National Smile Month.

The dental practice, on Kings Road in Harrogate, visits schools each year during the awareness-raising month to educate children on the importance of looking after their teeth and gums.  We ensure every child at each presentation received a goody bag containing a toothbrush, toothpaste and brushing charts.

Staff visited Rossett Acre Primary School, Oatlands Infant School and Darley Community Primary School during the latest initiative.


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Harrogate head set to move to new role at infant school

The headteacher of Grove Road Primary School is set to move on to a new role in September.

Christopher Harrison is taking up the post of headteacher at Oatlands Infant School, just two miles south of his current school.

The role was advertised after current head Zoe Anderson announced she was planning to move to the Isle of Skye after the end of the academic year.

Mr Harrison said:

“I am delighted to have been appointed as Headteacher at Oatlands Infant School.

“Whilst I have loved being a part of the Grove Road community for the last five years, both as a teacher and leader, I have always wanted to work in an infant school. I started my teaching career in Early Years and Key Stage 1, and the prospect of returning to work with these ages in a brilliant school – with the backing of a superb Multi Academy Trust and a fabulous community – was a tremendously exciting opportunity for me.

“I look forward to hearing about Grove Road’s continued successes, and I can’t wait to be part of Oatlands Infant School’s exciting journey going forward.”

Oatlands deputy headteacher Kathryn Haddon said:

“We are excited to welcome Mr Harrison in September and look forward to working together with him to build on all the existing successes in our nurturing and inspiring school.”

Confirmation that Mr Harrison will move means Grove Road is now seeking its own new headteacher.

In a statement, the governors of Grove Road Primary School said:

“We are sad that Mr Harrison will be leaving us at the end of the summer term, he has been an important figure in the school for the last five years. Although we will miss him, we wish him every success at Oatlands Infant School.

“As a governing body we are now focussed on recruiting our new headteacher for Grove Road Community Primary School.”

Oatlands Infant School has a three-form intake of 90 pupils each year, with up to 270 pupils across reception, year one and year two.

At Grove Road, the annual intake is 40 pupils, with a total of just under 300 on the role in its seven year groups.


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Last year, Grove Road was set to be amalgamated with Woodfield Primary School as the latter faced closure following a damning Ofsted report.

However, governors withdrew support for the plans in April 2022 because of the potential risks. They said the consultation period had highlighted potential problems with support for the proposal and the likely number of applications, concluding:

“Ultimately, the governing board have concluded that we must prioritise the future of Grove Road School and so, sadly, we can no longer support the proposed amalgamation.”

Oatlands Infant School is part of the Yorkshire Causeway Schools Trust, alongside St Aidan’s C of E High School and seven primary schools, six of which are in the Harrogate district.

Most of its pupils go on to the nearby Oatlands Junior School, which is part of the Red Kite Learning Trust of 13 primary and secondary schools across North and West Yorkshire.

As part of the recruitment pack for the new headteacher, Oatlands Infant School said an Ofsted inspection was “likely before the end of this academic year”. The last, in 2013, rated the school ‘outstanding’.

It said the new head would lead the response to the outcome of the next inspection.

Photo-a-day man from Harrogate writes autobiography aged just 30

A young Harrogate man who made international news when he turned 21 has written an autobiography to mark his 30th birthday.

Cory McLeod has led an extraordinary life since he was born, from trekking through South America as an infant with his parents to partying with boxer David Haye in his 20s.

It was a project begun by his dad on the day of his birth that first brought Cory to international attention.

Ian McLeod decided to take a photograph of his son’s face every day for the first year, or perhaps up to the age of two or three. At the time in 1991, he planned to turn into a flick-book – but the project soon grew.

Mr McLeod would send the camera with Cory’s teachers on school trips to ensure he didn’t miss a day, and even travelled for an hour late at night to take a shot when Cory was staying at a friend’s house, before driving home again.

Former Oatlands and St Aidan’s student Cory said:

“It was a family art project for a couple of years, but it became his passion or addiction and he just kept going.

“In his mind, 18 or 21 seemed a good time to stop, but when we got that far, we thought, ‘let’s keep going’.”

In 2012, Cory turned the photos into a video which he uploaded to YouTube, showing his development each day for more than two decades.

It proved a hit: it has since been viewed more than six million times. As a result, Cory and Ian hit the headlines and appeared on TV and radio shows around the world.

In the decade since, his life has been even more eventful.

Moving to Dubai to work in events has brought him into contact with numerous celebrities, from Rihanna to Prince Harry – who, on one memorable night, asked Cory to stop offering him drinks and leave him alone.

A keen traveller, Cory has had many adventures, not all of them trouble-free. He has been held at gunpoint and met bandits during his travels, but always managed to take his daily photograph to keep the project going.

Last month, he published a new video, including images up to his 30th birthday.

His new autobiography, which he began writing during the covid lockdown when he was stuck in his apartment in Dubai, is called 30 Years: A Life Lived Every Day. It covers all his experiences up to the age of 30, in late 2021.

It took him more than two years to complete it, often writing for six or seven hours after work.

The daily photographs, documenting wherever he was in the world, proved a useful prompt in his writing.


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The photos are a kind of social history, from masked selfies during the covid pandemic to the shot of him holding a Blockbuster video from the late 1990s. His favourites are those that show his travels around the world, and special moments in his family life.

Yet taking them has not always been easy, he said.

“I went through a phase where I was constantly remembering at 10 or 11 at night. I’m trying to get out of the habit of doing that.

“Over the course of the whole thing, we’ve only forgotten a handful of times.”

Cory McLeod with his parents

Cory’s autobiography will be published in August and is available to pre-order now.

It is his second book, after he turned his blog about his journey to Everest base camp into a book. He said he now has the writing bug and hopes to use his degree in TV and film production to turn to script writing next.

That drive to create comes from his parents, who were also adventurous: they took him backpacking in South America when he was just one. Dad Ian has since begun a new photo-a-day project, taking him from 60 to the end of his life.

As for the photographs – now selfies taken by Cory wherever he is in the world – he has no intention of stopping. He has his sights set on a lifetime of daily photos.

“I think it would be amazing – the first time you could see a full life, from birth to death.”

New head sought for Harrogate infant school

An infant school in Harrogate is seeking a new leader to replace its outgoing headteacher.

Zoe Anderson, who has been at Oatlands Infant School since 2018, is moving away from the area and the school is now looking for its next head.

In a job description posted on its website, the school said:

“Our outgoing headteacher has built a high-performing, popular and purposeful school, which offers a very exciting prospect for her successor.

“You’ll join a school in great health, with strong systems, a thriving culture, and shared expectations of support and accountability.”

A website set up to recruit the new head describes the school as being “in an enviable position to embark on our next chapter with excitement and curiosity”.

It refers to the challenges of finance and says the school does not want to compromise its standards because of stretched budgets.

The site also refers to the next Ofsted inspection being “likely before the end of this academic year” – the last, in 2013, rated the school ‘outstanding’ – and says the new head would lead the response to its outcomes.

Oatlands Infant School is part of the Yorkshire Causeway Schools Trust, along with six other primary schools in the Harrogate district and one in Skipton, and St Aidan’s Church of England High School.

The school was last month awarded the Inclusion Quality Mark, recognising its work to be inclusive of people regardless of their background.


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Deputy headteacher Kathryn Haddon said Mrs Anderson had made a “significant impact” since she joined the school.

She particularly highlighted improvements to the school building, including a new reception area, and developing stronger links with Oatlands Junior School.

She also said Mrs Anderson had developed the school’s vision of ‘Nurtured + Inspired = Happy’ and had delivered a legacy of wellbeing for staff, children and their families.

Miss Haddon added:

“On a personal note, I will miss her wisdom, guidance and friendship. I speak on behalf of everyone here at Oatlands Infant School in wishing her the very best as she sets off on a new and exciting adventure on the Isle of Skye.”

Oatlands Funclub nursery praised by Ofsted

Oatlands Funclub in Harrogate has been praised by Ofsted following a recent inspection.

Government inspectors visited the club, which is based at Oatlands Infant School, in March.

Their report, published this week, said “children are extremely happy and settled” and “managers have rigorous recruitment and induction processes in place”.

It added:

“Managers and staff complete regular safeguarding training. As a result, they have a good knowledge of the signs that may indicate a child is at risk of abuse or neglect.

“The manager provides regular one-to-one meetings for all staff. This provides them with the opportunity to discuss the children they care for, their roles and responsibilities and their training needs.”

Ofsted also found staff were continually reflecting on the club’s effectiveness and made changes if needed.


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Staff were praised for teaching children about hygiene and different cultural events throughout the year, such as crafts for Chinese New Year.

Funclub is a private company that provides before and after school care for children as well as holiday care. The club also runs services at Pannal, Rossett Acre, Richard Taylor School in Bilton and St Peter’s Primary School in Harrogate.

Jenny Rowlands, director of Funclub, said:

“This report is a testament to the team and management, the team truly care for the kids and it’s great to see that recognised in the report.”