The Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival will begin with its usual flourish this evening, as Harrogate sees a busy night of launches across the town.
Leading crime authors and hundreds of fans will descend on the Old Swan Hotel tonight for Europe’s largest crime writing event, which will see the winner of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year announced.
The festival continues until Sunday with a range of special guest events, panel discussions and dinners.
Meanwhile, the Coach and Horses will have its relaunch night tonight after being taken over by the owners of the neighbouring West Park Hotel, Provenance Inns.
Commercial manager Anthony Blundell previously told the Stray Ferret that the aim was to revamp the bar and kitchen as well as creating upstairs dining space. However, he said the traditional feel of the venue would be maintained, adding:
“We see it as the last traditional pub in Harrogate. We know from our guests how well it was respected.”
The pub will begin welcoming customers again from tomorrow.
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Another venue relaunching today is Fashion House on Swan Road, which opens its doors from 2pm following months of closure.
A soft launch will be held with a limited menu and cocktails, after a redesign inside and a new chef taking charge of the kitchen.
Meanwhile, in the town centre, yoga studio Ebru Evrim will welcome invited guests tonight before beginning to offer its programme of classes to its new James Street home.
The Turkish Baths on Parliament Street is holding an invitation-only launch party tonight following a refurbishment of the historic facilities.
And down the road near Spofforth, Stockeld Park is previewing its new play space. The Playhive, an indoor adventure space for children, will welcome its first visitors from Saturday, with booking available now.
Keep an eye on the Stray Ferret’s website and social media feeds for more on today’s events, including sneak peeks behind the scenes before the doors open.
Harrogate’s Turkish Baths celebrates 125th birthdayHarrogate’s Turkish Baths will celebrate its 125th birthday this weekend.
The Harrogate Borough Council-run leisure facility was opened on July 23, 1897 by Duke of Cambridge Prince George and cost £120,000 to build.
In its early days, water was pumped to the baths from several different springs, with treatments for conditions such as rheumatism, arthritis and sciatica being offered.
Facilities available during the baths’ Victorian heyday included dispensing of medicinal waters, hydrotherapy departments, mud baths and steam rooms as well as consulting doctors.
The baths were popular with members of royal families from around the world and a particular favourite of Queen Victoria’s granddaughters – Princess Alix and Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine.
Although Turkish baths were common in Victorian times, only seven remain that date back to the 19th century.
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To help celebrate the baths’ 125th birthday, heritage experts will be at Victoria Shopping Centre all this week from 10am until 3pm.
They will be sharing archive images and fascinating details about the original Victorian relaxation and health treatments, as well as information about the baths experience and treatments available today.
Conservative councillor Stanley Lumley, Harrogate Borough Council‘s cabinet member for culture, tourism and sport, and chair of the board of directors at council-owned leisure company Brimhams Active, said:
Harrogate district set to become health destination in echo of Victorian past“In a year of celebration, it’s fantastic that Turkish Baths Harrogate has reached such a significant milestone.
“It truly is a jewel in Harrogate’s crown, and each year tens of thousands of people visit us to enjoy a unique journey of heating, cooling and cleansing treatments, just as our Victorian ancestors did.
“And following our investment in 2018 and our ongoing commitment to the baths, customers can continue to enjoy both traditional and modern wellness experiences in such a historic setting.
“Here’s to another 125 years perfecting the art of relaxation in Britain’s most fully restored Victorian Turkish baths.”
Long before ‘wellness’ became a buzzword, the Victorians were effectively already practising it.
And Harrogate led the way — even back then.
The wealthy and fashionable flocked to the spa town to experience its green open spaces and recuperative and healing powers of spring waters, which were first discovered by William Slingsby in the late 16th century.
Health and wellbeing hotspot
Now, more than a century after the Victorian era, Harrogate Borough Council’s new tourism body, Destination Harrogate, is set to promote the district as a health and wellbeing hotspot once again.
It will draw on the district’s rich spa heritage and accessibility to the great outdoors to attract visitors, events and investment to create a strong local economy.
The approach forms one of three key objectives in a three-year plan, which sets out a vision, priorities and actions that will be put in place to make the district “a first choice destination”.
Speaking to the Stray Ferret, Gemma Rio, head of Destination Harrogate, explained what this would involve.
She said:
“People have been coming to Harrogate since 1571 to take the waters and have a leisure experience, so that’s not new, but it has developed over the years.
“Now you can still go to the Royal Pump Room Museum and understand the spa heritage and our roots and how we became this great leisure destination, but you can also go to the Turkish Baths, you can go and have an incredible spa experience at Rudding Park or Grantley Hall.
“So the whole district is very good at that traditional health and wellbeing piece.”

Rudding Park Spa.
Wellbeing different for everyone
Ms Rio, who was appointed in October 2020, said one lesson that had been learnt as a result of the pandemic was that health and wellbeing is different to everyone.
She said:
“For some people it is a massage and a jacuzzi, but to others it’s a walk in the Nidderdale AONB, or it’s seeing a show at the theatre, or it’s just being with family around the table at one of our great independent restaurants. So that’s what we are going to try and pull out in our campaign.”
The multi-channel campaign, which will have a digital marketing focus, is being launched in April and will run for most of the year.
Ms Rio said:
“If someone is a really avid walker, we want to tell them that story and plan itineraries for them around walking and country pubs.
“Our supporting campaigns will also try and pick up the same messages.
“Every year Visit Harrogate ran a successful gardening campaign. Our partners loved that campaign, they have seen some great results from it.
“Obviously as a destination, gardening is a real strength of ours as well. We’ve got RHS Harlow Carr, Newby Hall and various places that have great gardens.
“So even our gardens campaign is going to try and link in with the health and wellbeing priority as well.”

RHS Garden Harlow Carr.
Read more:
- Harrogate tourism body makes health and wellbeing top priority
- Head appointed to lead new Harrogate district tourism body
Attracting business events
The focus on health and wellbeing will also be used to attract more leisure and business events, with one of the target sectors for conferences being the medical industry, Ms Rio explained.
She said:
“Where else to hold your medical conference than a destination that has this incredible spa heritage and medical story to tell?
“Where better to base you new health and wellbeing business, or really any business?
“If you want to invest in a place, knowing that you’re going to be somewhere where your employees health and wellbeing will be looked after. A place where their work/life balance will be stronger. It’s much easier to employ people to come and join you if you base yourself somewhere like the Harrogate district.
“It’s a really exciting campaign.”
Collaboration is key
Ms Rio said when the three-year blueprint, known as the Destination Management Plan (DMP), was written, a consultation with residents and businesses was carried out in order to come up with the three main priorities set out in the document.
She said:
“This theme came up over and over again and I think in many ways it’s a bit of a no-brainer. We’ve got the history, we’ve got a great story to tell.
“Health and wellbeing has rocketed as a trend over the past couple of years. Plus we already have strong products, like the Turkish Baths. So it’s not trying to promote something that we are not actually that good at.
“It’s not rocket science what we have come up with. But I think what we have not done as a destination is work together to really push that in the same way that a place like Bath does.
“The story has always been there but we haven’t really taken advantage of it in a way that we can now.
“Everyone is really keen to work with us to see this become a success, and I think as a destination that’s the only way it can work. That collaboration is absolutely key.”
‘Core part’ of district’s identity
Ms Rio said the health and wellbeing campaign will continue to evolve and grow as a “core part” of the district’s identity.
She said:
“Other campaigns will run alongside it to highlight other strands such as retail or arts and culture, but there will always be this golden thread running through it.
“A trip to Harrogate district is good for you, regardless of whether you are into massage, theatre or walking.”

Nidderdale AONB.
One of the main messages that will be promoted by the campaign will be length of stay, which will aim to encourage visitors to come for long weekends or weeks away in the district.
Ms Rio added:
How to beat the Blue Monday blues: Top tips from a Harrogate life coach“The way we do that is we try and prepare itineraries. So we are adding some functionality to the Visit Harrogate website this year that makes it easy for someone to say ‘I’m going to go to this experience in the morning, have lunch at this pub, stay at this hotel’. That helps to encourage people to stay longer, which benefits the local economy.”
The festive season is over, payday seems like a lifetime away and there is often a sense of pressure to make big life changes at this time of the year.
And all of that is made worse by the fact it is still cold, dark, wet and miserable outside, with months to go until summer comes around.
So it is no surprise that Blue Monday – the ‘most depressing day of the year’ — falls in January.
Blue Monday usually falls on the third Monday of January, which this year is the 17th.
It appears to have originated in 2005 after a press release from Sky Travel used an equation to calculate the dreaded date.
So what should we do this year to beat those Blue Monday blues?
Harrogate life coach Lisa Duffield, owner of the Lisa Duffield Centre, has four tips.
1 Comparison is the thief of joy
“I wanted to share a little insight I have found within the clients I work with.
“Individuals that are suffering from what is branded the ‘January blues’ are all so focused on comparison.
“Comparison of this month to last month, this year to last year…
“You and your family’s goals or plans, compared to the family next door, or the family who you spend all your time watching on Instagram that you will never meet. And from this insight I bring you my first pill-free prescription to beat the case of January blues.
“Comparison is the single biggest waste of your time.
“Next time you find yourself comparing yourself to others or your life to others etc. just stop take a breath and if you insist on comparing yourself at all, think about you, how far have you come, what have you learned since yesterday, last year or even an hour ago.”

Harrogate life coach, Lisa Duffield.
2 Make realistic goals
“January blues can also shine through goal setting and unrealistic expectations.
“For some reason many of us believe that when the clock strikes 12 on January 1, you change into a new person, fitter, healthier, wealthier.
“Old traditions even show that we wish our first foot “all the wealth, health and happiness” for the New Year. While this is very kind, it does not mean that you have to become an overnight fitness fad and a self-made billionaire.
“Here comes the second tip, make realistic goals that you know you are able to achieve.
“You may have a big dream and that is amazing, but break it down into incremental chunks.
“Make smaller goals that you know will get to. They could be ‘eat more green veg’ or ‘move for an extra 30 minutes per day’, rather than ‘complete a bodybuilding competition and win in three months’.”
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3 Surround yourself with positivity
“Spend time with those who make you happy.
“Over Christmas many of us spend a lot of time with family and friends, we make the effort to go and see relatives that we haven’t seen since the year previous, or we say Merry Christmas to people in the street and smile.
“This makes us happy because we have also made others feel happy. Why stop?
“You can still spend time with ones you love and you can still engage with people in the street. A simple good morning or hello will work wonders.”
4 Try something new
“Last but not least. We’ve all heard it. ‘Insanity is doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results’.
“It’s time to try something new.
“If you are looking for a different result in 2022 and maybe you are feeling a little deflated, step out of your comfort zone and try something new.
“You will be surprised the paths this teeny act can lead to, you meet new people, learn and experience new things.”
4 ways to cheer yourself up on Blue Monday – by Nina Meads
1 Go for a walk

Nidd Gorge, is one of the many scenic walks that explore nature in the Harrogate district.
In the Harrogate district, we are fortunate enough to be surrounded by stunning countryside. We really are spoilt for choice and personal favourites are Thruscross Reservoir, Nidd Gorge and Hookstone Wood. You also can’t beat a walk around the grounds at Fountains Abbey or Knaresborough waterside.
So lace up those walking boots and head out into the great outdoors. Fresh air and being amongst nature will boost your mood.
If you’re at work, grab a coffee and go for a stroll on your lunch break.
2 Pamper yourself

Rudding Park Spa.
If you want to really spoil yourself, book into Harrogate’s Turkish Baths or enjoy a spa session at Rudding Park, Grantley Hall or Swinton Park.
If money or time is tight, nothing beats a good bath and a book.
3 Do some exercise and practice mindfulness at a Festival of Wellbeing in Harrogate

A ‘festival of wellbeing’ is being held in Harrogate.
While it’s not taking place on Blue Monday itself, OneWellness, in Mowbray Square, is hosting a second Festival of Wellbeing on Saturday, January 15, to help boost mental health.
The free festival from 9am until 4pm, which is being run in association with Mind Harrogate, Sweaty Betty and Hustle & Co, will offer a range of fitness, nutrition and health classes and talks.
From mindfulness and wellbeing, relax and de-stress yoga, to Pilates, barre, and dance cardio classes, the wellbeing experts at OneWellness have tailored each lesson to suit everyone and help boost physical fitness levels whilst increasing positive wellbeing.
4 Meet a friend for a cuppa and cake

Betty’s Harrogate.
The Harrogate district has some of the best coffee shops and tearooms in the country, including lots of amazing independents and the famous Betty’s.
Arrange to meet a friend for a catch-up and lots of laughs. After all, laughter is good for the soul. Oh and don’t forget the cake. That’s essential.

Harrogate landmarks including Bettys, the Turkish Baths and the Great Yorkshire Showground’s main ring have been built in Lego bricks for a new town centre trail this summer.
The trail, created by Harrogate Business Improvement District, will run from Saturday July 31 until Sunday, August 22.
It includes ten mini-models at the following locations:
- Harrogate Town Football Club Shop, Commercial Street
- Games Crusade, Oxford Street
- HSBC, Cambridge Crescent
- Primark, Cambridge Street
- Waterstones, James Street
- Bettys, Parliament Street
- Maturi, Parliament Street
- Westmorland Sheepskin, Montpelier Hill
- Asda, Bower Road
- Orvis, West Park
- Victoria Shopping Centre (mosaic and public live build event)
The models are being made by Fairy Bricks, a charity that donates Lego sets to children’s hospices and hospitals, and will be completed next week in time for the launch.
Other models include Harrogate Town’s mascot Harry Gator and Hogwart’s School from the Harry Potter books.
At 10am on July 31 and August 1, people can watch a white rose being built of Lego at the Victoria Shopping Centre.
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There is also a competition with 500 Lego prizes to be won. To enter, participants need to download the LoyalFree app and ‘check in’ at each venue using the QR code displayed.
The prizes will be collected from Toyland in the Victoria Shopping Centre.
Harrogate BID Manager Chapman Matthew Chapman said:
Harrogate council publishes heavily redacted Turkish Baths responses“With the school summer holidays already here we wanted to create a trail that would really appeal to families.
“With restrictions now lifted, this is one that can be enjoyed by people of all ages, and will be a fun way to spend a few hours visiting different parts of the town.
“As a child I loved Lego, and so do my two sons. And as you will see from these creations Lego can be anything but child’s play. I’m really excited to say that we have commissioned a number of models that will be unique to our trail.
“One of our key remits is to drive footfall into the town centre, and we hope our Lego trail will help us to achieve this.”
Harrogate Borough Council has today published heavily redacted responses to its consultation on single-sex sessions at the town’s Turkish Baths, after previously saying the information was restricted.
The council considered banning single-sex sessions at the 124-year-old council-owned baths but changed its mind after the consultation revealed 92% opposed the move.
A summary of the consultation’s 325 responses was published this month. But the council took the unusual step of not revealing individual responses on the grounds that they contained personal information.
After being questioned about this, the council today released a statement saying that because of its commitment to being “open and transparent”, it had decided to disclose the information after all.
But many of the responses are heavily redacted in black type.
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- Decision delayed on Turkish Baths nude bathing ban
- Council set to retain single-sex sessions at Turkish Baths
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One person said:
“Single sex sessions are invaluable and help women feel that they can fully relax and enjoy the experience. It would be a huge loss for women if those sessions were removed.”
Another said:
“Don’t let down the majority by slavishly following a trend that may be short-lived. Harrogate has had the courage of its convictions for centuries.”
A spokesman for Harrogate Borough Council said:
“When someone takes part in one of our consultations, they do so on the basis that the information they provide will be kept secure and treated in accordance with data protection laws.
“We also owe them a duty of care to treat their responses as private and confidential.
“In the case of this consultation, responses included highly sensitive information including stories from victims of violent crimes.
“However, in recognition of our commitment to be an open and transparent council, a redacted version of the responses has been published in the Have Your Say section of our website.
“All personal data, identifying or confidential information has been removed to maintain respondents’ anonymity.”
Harrogate transparency campaigner Peter Lilley, a long-time critic of the council, called the number of redactions in the document “ludicrous”.
He told the Stray Ferret:
Decision delayed on Turkish Baths nude bathing ban“Harrogate Borough Council makes itself look more and more ridiculous every day.
“Considering council officers have had seven or eight months to process the information it received from the consultation on proposed changes at Harrogate’s Turkish Baths, it’s hard to imagine how the responses could have been presented more unattractively; with so many comments ‘blacked out’ that, in places, the document is totally unintelligible and unreadable.
“The sheer number of redactions is ludicrous. They must amount to several hundred – and on what grounds? The council has even blacked out answers to the question: how often do you visit the baths? How can that possibly be considered sensitive information?”
A decision on whether to ban nude bathing at Harrogate Turkish Baths has been delayed while a planned move to mixed-sex sessions only has been reversed.
The 124-year-old spa and health club – which is run by Harrogate Borough Council – has previously had swimwear-free options at single-sex sessions.
However, covering up could be made compulsory under changes which the council said would reflect greater “equality” in the modern world and address concerns for customers of “varying gender categories including transgender, gender dysphoria and transsexual”.
A decision from the council’s cabinet member for culture, tourism and sport, councillor Stanley Lumley, was due this week but he has now asked for more time to mull it over.
He did, however, decide that plans to change the current timetable of single-sex sessions and to mixed-sex sessions only would be scrapped following big response from bathers.
Confirming the decision, a council spokesperson said:
“The decision regarding changes to the timetable, has been approved.
“The decision regarding compulsory swimwear at the Turkish Baths Harrogate has been deferred. This matter will be given further consideration, and will include our wider equality obligations.”
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- Starbeck Residents Association says the Baths should be “kept open at all costs”
After the now-abandoned timetable changes were revealed last year, customers criticised the move and said people would stop visiting if it went ahead.
Baths manager Chris Mason previously said the changes would “promote inclusivity” but 92% of 325 respondents to a survey said they felt mixed-sex sessions only would stop customers attending.
The majority of respondents also agreed that a “safe space” was needed for men and women separately at the baths.
The Grade II-listed building on Parliament Street has been described as “the most fully-restored” Turkish baths in Britain.
It first opened in 1897 and has been managed by the council since the late 1990s.
Council set to retain single-sex sessions at Turkish BathsHarrogate Borough Council is set to retain single-sex sessions at the town’s Turkish Baths, but make swimwear compulsory.
Last year, the council considered scrapping single-sex sessions in order to reflect “equality and balance”.
The authority launched a consultation into the matter, which ran while the baths were closed.
In a report due before the Cabinet Member for Culture, Tourism and Sport next week, council officers have recommended two weekly single-sex sessions for males and females under a new timetable.
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- Turkish Baths Harrogate considers cutting same-sex sessions
- How the council handed over control of leisure services to a new company
Currently, it offers three single-sex sessions for women and one for men.
The council has also recommended making it a requirement to wear suitable swimwear for these sessions.
The authority said the changes would promote inclusivity, enable male and female attendants to work at both sessions and help it comply with the Equality Act 2010.
In the report, it said:
“The proposed timetable changes will promote further inclusivity.
“Making the wearing of swimwear compulsory at all single-sex sessions will also promote inclusivity, allow the Council to meet its equality obligations under the Equality Act and alleviate staffing issues during single-sex sessions.”
The consultation received 325 responses – 89% of which said they booked single-sex sessions at the baths, while 90% believed a move to a fully mixed timetable would not allow for equal access to all customers.
The council said the new timetable for sessions would come into force when the Turkish Baths fully reopened.
It added that the timetable would be reviewed every six months to ensure it had “no negative commercial impact”.
Harrogate Turkish Baths: decision on same-sex sessions due next yearHarrogate Borough Council is set to decide next year whether to end same-sex sessions at the town’s Turkish baths.
The council, which runs the baths, told the Stray Ferret today it planned to publish a report based on its recent consultation by early next year.
The council has said a timetable consisting entirely of mixed sessions would reflect “equality and balance”.
It opened an online consultation in July seeking views on the possible axeing of same-sex sessions. The consultation, which ran while the baths were closed, has now finished.
Read more:
- Turkish Baths Harrogate considers cutting same sex sessions
- How the council handed over control of leisure services to a new company
- When the district’s leisure facilities closed over coronavirus fears
Harrogate’s Turkish baths remain closed for sessions but have been open since August for treatments only.
A spokesman for the council said it would publish its report on the consultation “in December of possibly January”. A decision will be taken shortly afterwards.
The baths stopped male-only sessions back in 2011 in the wake of reports of “inappropriate behaviour,” only to bring them back five years later.
It is unclear when a new timetable, if implemented, would happen. The government has not indicated when saunas or spa rooms are set to reopen.
Turkish Baths Harrogate to reopen after five monthsTurkish Baths Harrogate will reopen this week five months after the coronavirus pandemic forced its closure.
For now the baths will only be able to open for treatments on Friday. It is unclear when the sessions will get the green light.
A spokesperson for Turkish Baths Harrogate said that the sessions will remain closed for a “little while longer”.
The baths used the time to renovate its 123-year-old flooring. The council said it could have become dangerous.
Read more:
- How the council handed over control of leisure services to a new company
- When the district’s leisure facilities closed over coronavirus fears
- Turkish Baths Harrogate considers cutting same-sex sessions
- Turkish Baths flooring ‘dangerous’ without urgent repairs
A report seeking retrospective approval for the work detailed how Harrogate Borough Council needed to spend close to £30,000.
In the report, the council said that the floor is showing signs of water egress, wear in grouted joints, and cracks in the terrazzo.
Harrogate Borough Council also launched a consultation into dropping single-sex sessions. Moving to mixed-sessions only would reflect “equality and balance,” according to the council.
Meanwhile, the historic venue is set to become part of a new local authority controlled company (LACC), along with the district’s pools and gyms, as part of an overhaul of leisure services.
