Clubs and organisations in Ripon are to provide a programme of free summer activities for the city’s children.
Community interest company Ripon Together has organised a wide range of events, starting on Saturday.
Summer of Play aims to get children out together again, trying new sports and activities.
It will also help local organisations encourage young people to join up.
A spokesperson for Ripon Together said.
“The children of the city have been especially brave and resilient over the last 18 months.
“They’ve seen huge upheaval with schools and their usual activities have been cancelled and adapted during the pandemic.
“Now, as the restrictions lift, amazing organisations across the city have joined in with the initiative. The result is a programme of free events giving kids of all school ages the opportunity to try sports or other activities over the summer.”

Hugh Ripley Hall is the venue for wheelchair bowls (Boccia) and yoga on Sunday
Events range from formal team sports such as cricket and football, through to karate and croquet, dance, yoga, mindfulness and orienteering, as well as nature hunts at Fountains Abbey.
First up on Saturday is a free taster session at Karate Dojo, the chance to have fun with the whole family at a free play day at Ripon Tennis Centre and an opportunity to get moving in a fun dance class hosted by Ripon Dance Studio.
On Sunday, fun with tennis and karate continues and children will also be able to try their hands at boccia and yoga at the Hugh Ripley Hall.
There are sessions for people with disabilities too, including wheelchair bowls.
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Karate coach Ady Gray, who was named UK’s Children’s Coach of the Year in 2018, said:
“It’s great to welcome our children and young people back into the social community of sport and recreation.
“This initiative will promote the great clubs and groups to all the local people of Ripon, offering benefits to fitness, health and mental wellbeing after what has been a hard year both physically and mentally for our children.”
Diane Hutchinson, from Ripon Tennis Centre, said:
“Health and fitness should be fun and tennis is a fantastic game that is not only fun to play but also offers great social opportunities also. We have classes to suit all levels of player so if you want to get involved we would love to see you!”
Activities have been arranged throughout July and August. The full programme can be viewed at www.ripontogether.com
Stockeld Park to create huge £3.5m play centre
One of Europe’s biggest indoor children’s play centres, with the capacity to host 2,000 visitors a day, is set to open at Stockeld Park next year.
Called the Playhive, it will cost £3.5 million to build and is expected to create about 50 jobs.
The Playhive, which will be set in the grounds of the 2,000-acre Stockeld Park estate, near Wetherby, will comprise of themed adventure zones set in a doughnut-shaped building with a 33-foot tower in the centre.
The outer ring of the Playhive will be the equivalent of travelling the length of a football pitch.
Children will be able to enjoy the wooden play pieces themed around four zones: space, aeronautical, subaquatic and jungle.
Peter and Susie Grant, who own and run Stockeld Park, took out a loan to build and design the Playhive.
Mr Grant said:
“The Playhive is a passion project. We didn’t want the usual soft play scene, but one that truly inspires imaginations.
“There will be some really spectacular features and we’ll be announcing these on the run up to the opening of the Play Hive.
“It has capacity for 2,000 visitors per day and is expected to bring significant additional revenues to the area, as well as supporting local suppliers.
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‘We need to come back fighting’
Mr Grant said covid had hugely reduced Stockeld’s capacity and the natural reaction would have been to reduce spending but lockdown reconfirmed their commitment to the project. He said:
“Now more than ever, our tourism sector needs to come back fighting, and after the isolation and anxieties of the last year, families desperately need to get away and have some fun. We need this good news story.”
The Grants started the tourism business at Stockeld Park in 2006 to attract visitors at Christmas.
The initiative grew into the Christmas Adventure and since then the Easter Adventure, Spring Adventure, Summer Adventure, Halloween Adventure and February Fun have been added to its offering.
In 2019, over 200,000 guests visited Stockeld Park.
Play reveals Harrogate’s secret royal role in WWIIA new play has revealed the Harrogate district’s little-known role in a secret plan to protect the royal family and Prime Minister Winston Churchill during the Second World War.
The Stray is a two-act drama by playwright Keith Burton with the assistance of Harrogate historian Malcolm Neesam.
It tells the story of Harrogate’s role in the Coats Mission, which was a secret plan to evacuate the royal family from London.
Newby Hall, near Ripon, was identified as a possible home for the royal family and a wing of Grove House on Skipton Road in Harrogate, opposite an RAF bunker, was designated as a possible home for Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
On September 8 1940 Buckingham Palace was bombed and the Coats Mission plans were expedited.
However, the RAF and the Secret Intelligence Service did not want the Harrogate district plans to go ahead as they were building Washington bombers at nearby Yeadon and had a station at Forest Moor in Nidderdale feeding code-breaking intelligence to Bletchley Park.
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Then on September 12 a Junker 88 attacked the Majestic Hotel in Harrogate. These were the only bombs to fall on the town in the war.
Newspapers at the time reported “a stray” bombing by a plane and said it was part of a bigger raid on “northern industrial targets” without naming where the other bombs had fallen.
But the intelligence agencies did not regard it as a stray bomb and two days after the attack on Harrogate the Coats Mission was dropped.
The Stray is based on what might have happened in Harrogate during the week commencing September 8 1940.

Newby Hall.
Cllr Jim Clark, who is the chairman of North Yorkshire County Council and commissioned the play, has a long history of involvement in theatre. He said:
“There have always been stories about Harrogate’s part in the war so I thought this was a unique way of capturing the drama of it. I wanted to be able to make a contribution to help drama groups at schools and amateur dramatic groups. I will have the rights to the play for five years so anybody can perform it within reason.
Mr Clark has approached Harrogate Dramatic Society and Harrogate Theatre with the play. He hopes that it will start in Yorkshire and spread further afield.