Harrogate Borough Council looks set to install contactless donation points in parks in Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough.
The donation points will be put in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens, Knaresborough Castle, Conyngham Hall in Knaresborough and in Ripon Spa Gardens to generate income for the upkeep and development of parks and open spaces.
Councillors are expected to approve spending £18,000 to install them at a meeting on January 10.

Ripon Spa Gardens
A report to councillors said all the locations”feature high quality ornamental gardens and relatively high levels of footfall”.
There will be three sites in Valley Gardens — the main entrance, the band stand and the children’s play area. The report said:
“The proposed locations will encourage visitor interaction as each is a prominent footfall area and will be particularly busy during the increased number of events held in the gardens.
“The colourful ‘duck’ for coin donations that is emptied and banked at Claro Road is proposed to be retained.”
Read more:
- Model boaters in Valley Gardens call for public support to stop fountain
- Volunteers step in to run Conyngham Hall leisure facilities
The Valley Gardens Development Strategy, published in July last year, proposed creating contactless donation points.
Subsequent consultation with Bournemouth Parks Foundation and the Lake District Foundation suggested an average annual income of £2,000 per donation point.

Knaresborough Castle
It added financial modelling indicated the initial capital investment of £18,000 would be repaid within two years with an annual income of around £12,000 achieved thereafter.
A phased roll-out this year, starting with Knaresborough Castle, Ripon Spa Gardens and Valley Gardens by the end of March, are set for approval. The report concludes:
Harrogate council error sees Pinewoods conservation miss out on over £30,000“Supporting the additional contactless donation points will help raise additional funding to maintain and improve parks and open spaces for the enjoyment of residents, visitors and will support the wider local economy.”
Pinewoods Conservation Group has criticised Harrogate Borough Council after an administrative error meant £32,400 that should have been spent improving the woodland over the last 10 years was not allocated.
The council-owned Pinewoods is a 96-acre woodland close to Harrogate’s Valley Gardens popular with walkers. Although the area is managed by the council, the Pinewoods Conservation Group charity promotes its maintenance and conservation.
A flurry of new housing developments has occurred near to the Pinewoods in recent years. After being granted planning permission, developers agree to pay money to the council through section 106 agreements to improve local infrastructure.
Since 2019, Pinewoods Conservation Group has pressed the council to allocate some of this section 106 money to the Pinewoods to improve things like footpaths and signage.
After a council report in January revealed the authority had £3.7m in unspent section 106 money, the charity again asked it if any of this money could be spent on the Pinewoods before the council is abolished in 2023.
But in an email seen by the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Cllr Tim Myatt, Conservative cabinet member for planning, told the charity this money had already been committed to other sites.
The charity responded by saying it was “very surprised” section 106 money would not be spent on the Pinewoods, “especially with the amount of building work underway and planned within the area”.

The Pinewoods
Cllr Myatt responded to the charity again this week to say that following an investigation by officers, the council found three instances when money, worth a combined valued of £32,400, should have gone to the Pinewoods but didn’t due to “administrative and processing” errors.
In the email, Cllr Myatt apologised and said the funds could have been “put to good use” by either Pinewoods Conservation Group or the council. He said:
“I would like to take the opportunity to apologise for this error, as it was an opportunity to bring external money to enhance the Pinewoods. I know that you will find this frustrating and I share this frustration.
“Whilst the monies would have been allocated to the space, not awarded directly to the conservation group, it could still have been put to good use by either the council or conservation group (were an enhancement scheme available for fund allocation).”
A spokesperson for Pinewoods Conservation Group said it was “very disappointed” the Pinewoods had missed out on the money due to the error. They added:
“These monies could have supported much needed improvement and conservation efforts for the benefit of visitors and residents.
“We are also disappointed that it took over three years from the charity first raising concerns with the council for the errors to acknowledged, and hopefully now corrected. However, we thank and acknowledge the efforts of Cllr Myatt in finally bringing this matter to a close.”
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A council spokesperson said:
Man jailed for lewd act near children’s play area in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens“Due to an administrative processing error, monies were not collected from three developments via section 106 legal agreements that could have been spent on the Pinewoods.
“We have put measures in place to help prevent this from happening in the future.
“The monies do not go directly to the charity, but are earmarked for enhancements to Pinewoods. And as landowner, we continue to undertake woodland management and enhance the Pinewoods, in partnership with the charity.”
Warning: this article contains details some people may find upsetting.
A sexual predator has been jailed for over two years for performing a lewd act near the children’s play area in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens.
Kevin Payne, 67, was under a strict court order not to go anywhere near children’s play parks following previous convictions for child-sex offences.
But on June 12 he parked his car outside Valley Gardens and made his way to a wooded area near a children’s play area, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Brooke Morrison said a passer-by spotted Payne performing a lewd act in woods overlooking the play park.
Payne was “startled” by the passer-by, who spotted him through a gap in a hedge and shouted over to him as Payne ran away.
Ms Morrison added:
“The passer-by gave chase and (as) he followed Payne, he took a number of pictures of him before apprehending him and keeping him there until police arrived.”
Payne was arrested and admitted breaching a sexual-harm prevention order, which prohibited him from going within 100 metres of any recreational area where there may be children present.
However, he denied a separate charge of outraging public decency by behaving in an indecent manner, namely performing a lewd act.

The play area in Valley Gardens.
Payne, from Bradford, was due to face trial today but admitted the offence at the last minute.
Ms Morrison said Payne committed the offences in Harrogate while under investigation for downloading indecent sexual imagery online.
He was arrested for those offences in December last year after police monitoring officers paid him a routine visit to check he was complying with the sexual-harm prevention order following a previous jail sentence for child-sex offences.
Payne handed over his mobile phone on which police found internet searches for sexual images of children and an indecent photo of a child rated Category A – the worst kind. They also found six images of extreme pornography, namely bestiality.
Payne admitted making an indecent image of a child and possessing six extreme-pornographic images following his arrest and was recalled to prison to serve the remainder of a six-month jail sentence imposed in June last year for making indecent images of children.
He was released from prison in January this year and went on to commit the offences at Valley Gardens in June.
40 years of crime
The Crown proceeded to sentence on all matters today as the prosecution outlined Payne’s 40-year criminal history, which comprised 51 previous offences including many for indecently exposing himself in front of young girls and making indecent images of children.
His rap sheet also included voyeurism, kerb-crawling, engaging in sexual activity in the presence of a child, serious violence, harassment, public disorder, and breaching court orders.
He had been given extended prison sentences in the past for child-sex offences as various judges deemed him a dangerous offender.
Defence barrister Derek Duffy said Payne “did not intend to be seen by anybody” in Valley Gardens when he carried out the lewd act.
He said Payne had rented accommodation in Bradford before being remanded in custody, but he had since lost that and intended to live with a friend in Harrogate upon his release from jail.
He added that Payne — formerly of Ling Park Avenue, Bingley, but currently of no fixed address — was a retired man who had lost all contact with his family and was a “rather despondent” figure.
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- Viper Rooms: council issues statement after repossessing Harrogate nightclub
Judge Simon Hickey described Payne’s latest offences in Valley Gardens as “quite revolting” and told him:
“You are, worryingly, 67, and you are still committing offences of this nature. Fortunately, the children were not to see what you did.”
Payne was given a 27-month jail sentence but will only spend half of that behind bars before being released on prison licence.
He was ordered to sign on the sex-offenders’ register for 10 years and the judge ordered that the sexual-harm prevention order would remain in place.
Mr Hickey said the named witness who chased and detained Payne would be paid £150 from the public purse for his “very-public-spirited” actions.
Stray Views: Valley Gardens boating pool should remain for boats
Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Valley Gardens boating pool is for boats
May I quote from my book Souvenir Guide to the Valley Gardens in relation to Fountain v Model Yachts.
The Valley Gardens grew from an ancient footpath that linked the Old Sulphur Well beneath the Royal Pump Room with the mineral wells on Bogs Field. During the nineteenth century, the walk was embellished with planting. At this time, there were paths either side of the stream which incorporated ponds, fountains and a rock garden.
The boating pool was built as a children’s paddling pool in 1925. Over time its use changed from a children’s paddling pool to the Boating Pool.
The boating pool should be left for boats and the Fountain should be where it used to be in the stream not far from the Magnesia Well where it was much admired.
Anne Smith, Harrogate
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Government should take climate crisis seriously with flexible planning laws
I confess to being disappointed with the performance of the government of late – a fiasco on many levels, I’d say. I would not have been able to continue to keep my reputation and run a business for the twenty years I did had I acted in the manner of our representatives.
However, putting that aside, I want to do something – for myself – to mitigate the risks associated with the current crises of climate change, energy pricing and the cost of living but seem to be being blocked at every turn.
You see, I’m lucky enough to live in a conservation area – not that it had that designation when I bought the property over thirty years ago. In addition, in the late 1990’s, I bought a derelict barn at the bottom of my garden that was originally part of a farm. The developer building houses on the site of the farm was intending to demolish the barn (which is over 100 years old) and build a garage for the new builds, three expensive new properties.
To cut a long story short, we purchased the barn, repaired the walls and roof, then made it into habitable accommodation and connected it to our bungalow for my mother-in-law to move into as she had some health issues, made worse by the loss of her husband. This work was completed in 2000.
For energy efficiency reasons, I’d like to fit good quality uPVC doors & windows (which are almost indistinguishable from wood) in the barn and have applied twice to change the original planning permission which stipulated wood was to be used – the last time going to appeal. Permission was refused. The bungalow attached to the barn already has uPVC windows, as do many other properties in the conservation area, and the barn windows are not visible from the road.
What I am asking is that our governments decides what they want to do. We can live in a pretty country with quaint houses we can’t afford to heat – generating higher levels of CO2 – and be unable to do anything about it or we can take the crises we face seriously and allow some flexibility in the planning process – face the problems head-on.
The front of my house faces south and I’d be willing to install, at my cost, solar panels and an energy storage system but, this requires planning permission with the associated cost and hassle; some applications have been refused because it spoils the look of the village – which has to be nonsense in light of the current crises.
I’d like our governments to decide what they want. The energy crisis is fundamentally of our own making – don’t tell me it is a world problem, out of our hands; nonsense – it isn’t. We should never have done the dash-for-gas – generating electricity from gas; had we refrained, we’d still be self-sufficient in natural gas. This isn’t hindsight; as a Fellow of the IET, I have given numerous talks on climate change – warning of the dangers for decades – and I am on record as saying that we should not be generating electricity with gas. The reasoning, gas can be delivered to the home for burning at 90% efficiency. This drops to 30 or 40% (at best) if it is delivered as electricity. If I’m generous I’d say we have wasted 60% of the gas we used in electricity generation.
We’ve screwed up, and the current Conservatives must take some of the blame – they’ve been in power for long enough. What we need is vision; the government isn’t leading but has been forced to act by the (inevitable) rise of the evil empire and its invasion of Ukraine. What it has done is too little and too late. We all need to rise to the challenge. We can achieve more but what is currently being done is green-washing and simply not enough. Governments local and national must remove the roadblocks and let us be accountable for solving the problem ourselves. Give me the chance.
Paul Smith, Staveley
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Model boaters in Valley Gardens call for public support to stop fountainClaro Marine model boating club has called on the public to help stop a fountain being installed in the Valley Gardens’ boating pond.
Harrogate Borough Council plans to put the fountain in the pool next year at a cost of £6,000. The boaters have argued it will stop their hobby as water from the fountain will damage the engines of their model boats.
The club’s secretary, Dave Finnegan, wrote to the council outlining its concerns and earlier this month received a response.
Head of parks and environment services, Alison Wilson, wrote:
“As the body [of the fountain] consists of a base and jets there is little infrastructure involved. Once in place, we will consider any protection required to ensure there is no damage to the jets from boats and vice versa.
“We do not wish to curtail your clubs activities, simply make the area more attractive and usable at other times of the week”.
Mr Finnegan told the Stray Ferret he was unhappy with Ms Wilson’s reply.
“You can’t use a model boat where there is a fountain. If your boat goes wrong or there is some interference with the remote control you can find the boat in the fountain area which damages the boat.
“If there is a fender cutting off the fountain, then you’re cutting off a huge area for the boats to go. It is a small pond really not a lake. The boats need the deeper water which is where they’ll put the fountain. “
Read More:
- Fountain will end model boating in Valley Gardens, says club
- Model boating must continue, says Friends of Valley Gardens
The council has also said it was working on a scheme where the club could disable the fountain but Mr Finnegan said it had additional concerns that in hot weather the fountain water could pose a public health risk. As a result it doesn’t want responsibility for operating it
“The pond is shallow and we’re concerned that if the water temperature rises above 20 degrees celsius the fountain could create the risk of spreading legionnaires disease.”
The council has rejected this, saying the pond will be monitored and tested in hot weather.
The boating pond in Valley Gardens, which is currently drained
The club though has its supporters — retired lawyer, Dr Trevor Dale, wrote to Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones, outlining concerns for the boaters and raising the legionnaires disease issue.
Mr Jones then contacted Alison Wilson and sent Dr Dale a letter with her response in it.
So the club felt it had got no further and it has left the boaters feeling frustrated and powerless.
Mr Finnegan said:
“We’ve no idea how to change their minds. When you consider it has been used as a boating pool for 98 years, it’s very sad.
“Nobody is helping us so I’d like the public to get involved and write to the council or to Andrew Jones and call for the fountain plan to be cancelled.”
New book reveals history behind Valley Gardens trees
A Harrogate woman has co-authored a guide to trees in the town’s Valley Gardens.
The book, by Jane Blayney and Simon Hill, documents 30 species of trees in the gardens and looks at how they make the area special.
The authors describe the shape, bark, leaves, flowers and fruit of each species and reveal how they were introduced to the British Isles. They also highlight some of the pests and diseases that threaten survival.
Among the trees included in the book are Horse Chestnut, Weeping Willow and Atlas Cedar.
Ms Blayney, who co-authored the book with president of the Royal Photographic Society of Great Britain, Mr Hill, said the book was a labour of love during the pandemic.
She said:
“I have lived many decades in the Valley Gardens area.
“However, until I became chair of the Friends of Valley Gardens I did not realise the wealth and variety of the trees within the gardens.”
Read more:
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- Authors celebrate Valley Gardens’ journey from springs to scenic spot
Ms Blayney added she hoped the book will help more people to “realise the enormous importance of trees” and allow them to explore Valley Gardens with greater insight.
She said she was also grateful to Cllr Jim Clark, former chairman of North Yorkshire County Council, who helped to fund the book.
The 72-page guide also includes a foreword from Martin Fish, president of the Friends of Valley Gardens.
The book is currently available for £7.50 at the Valley Gardens website. You can find out more information on how to order a copy here.
Warning as fallen tree blocks path in the PinewoodsA tree has fallen along the main path between Valley Gardens and Hallow Moor Road.
The tree was spotted this morning by the Pinewoods Conservation Group who subsequently tweeted to alert the public.
The tweet read:
“Please take care in the very wet woods. Tree down over the main path from Valley Gardens to Harlow Moor Rd that should hopefully be cleared soon.”
The path connects Valley Gardens to RHS Garden Harlow Carr and lies deep within the Pinewoods.
Read more:
- Met Office issues weather warning for rain in Harrogate district
- Pinewoods charity to meet Harrogate Spring Water to discuss expansion
Weather warnings have been issued across North Yorkshire with Harrogate in particular being affected by the rain and flooding.
Please let us know if the rain is causing problems where you are, email us at contact@thestrayferret.co.uk
Anger at decision to seal off part of Harrogate’s Valley GardensExercise groups have criticised Harrogate Borough Council‘s decision to seal off a popular part of Valley Gardens.
The path in front of the Sun Pavilion is widely used by people taking part in fitness classes, including yoga and tai chi.
But gates have been put up forbidding access.
Michael Constantine, head of operations at Harrogate Convention Centre, said:
“The Sun Pavilion is a privately run venue, we have sadly had to take the decision to close off the gates due to recent vandalism and anti-social behaviour.
“In addition, some of the fitness groups have also caused damage with their equipment meaning the council tax payer has had to fund preventable repairs”.
Exercise groups have reacted angrily to the loss of the facility — and the suggestion they cause damage.
Bridget Tayan, speaking on behalf of Red Orchid Tai Chi group, which uses Valley Gardens regularly, said:
“Ou tai chi group have been practising up there for over 10 years and have never caused damage or inconvenienced anyone.
“Indeed we are often asked questions about the Sun Pavilion by passing tourists.
“I also pointed out that most of our group are in their 60s and 70s and not likely to vandalise anything. I have not had a reply.”
Read more:
- Fountain will end model boating in Valley Gardens, says club
- Harrogate district firefighters tackle four ‘significant incidents’ overnight
Ms Tayan said several other fitness groups, including yoga organisations and army-style fitness sessions, along with personal trainers and individuals who liked to keep fit. also used the area when it rained and were “equally dismayed”.
She added:
“I know that many of the Valley Garden regulars are concerned about the gates being locked as it has always been a right of way, apart from when there are functions, which is fair enough.
“Visitors like to stand on the terrace to take photos and it is one of the few places you can shelter if it is raining hard.”
Ms Tayan also suggested the size of the gates was unlikely to deter vandals.
‘Our council tax pays for this’
Comments on Friends of Valley Garden’s Facebook group were overwhelmingly critical of the move.
One said:
“I am a member of a fitness group who use Valley Gardens. We would never cause damage to the gardens and appreciate the beautiful gardens we can look at while at our classes.”
Another said:
“Another example of the short-sightedness of Harrogate council. I’ve exercised here for years, many others do so too. I have never, ever witnessed any damage of any kind. Our council should be facilitating and encouraging outdoor fitness.”
“So we can have a nice amenity just as long as we don’t use it? Our council tax pays for this and we want it back.”
A 15-year-old girl has been sentenced to a 12-month referral order for her role in an attack on two police officers in broad daylight in Harrogate.
The incident took place in McDonald’s on Cambridge Road at around 5pm on April 1 this year.
The girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons, pleaded guilty to five charges. They included two counts of assaulting police community support officers, causing both actual bodily harm and one of affray, using or threatening violence which led people to fear for their safety, all in the fast food restaurant.
She also admitted a further charge of assaulting a police officer by beating her in Valley Gardens, and one of failing to comply with an exclusion order to leave McDonald’s.
North Yorkshire Youth Court, sitting at Harrogate Justice Centre, heard today that the teenager had been in McDonald’s with friends at about 5pm when there was confusion over whether or not they were banned from the premises. Police officers were called and the girls were found in the upstairs toilets.
In trying to remove them from the building, the officers came under attack.
‘Tussle’
Prosecuting, Melanie Ibbotson said:
“The PCSO goes to grab [another teenage girl] to stop her going back into the toilets and as she does so, there’s a tussle between them both.
“She was trying to grab hold of her, they were pushing and pulling each other, moving towards the top of the stairs, and at this point [the officer] activates her alarm.”
Ms Ibbotson said the 15-year-old then went to help her friend, but in trying to prevent herself being pushed down the stairs, the PCSO grabbed her hair.
The court was shown video evidence of the attack in which the PCSO was punched on the nose, causing heavy bleeding, and her colleague was hit around the face, injuring her jaw and cheek.
The teenagers then left the building and were found in Valley Gardens by other police officers. The 15-year-old spat at a police constable as she was arrested.
The PCSOs were taken to hospital. Neither suffered broken bones, but the PCSO with the injured nose required several months of treatment and could still face an operation to repair the damage inflicted on her in the attack.
The other PCSO had since left the police, the court heard, in part because of the incident in McDonald’s.
Read more:
- Teenagers charged after PCSOs allegedly assaulted in Harrogate McDonald’s
- Two PCSOs seriously injured after attack in Harrogate McDonald’s
Defending, Andrew Tinning of Grahame Stowe Bateson, told the court the teenager had never been in trouble with the police before and the incident had “come out of the blue”.
He said she had been working voluntarily with the youth offending team in the months since, in order to improve her behaviour. He said:
“When she was interviewed, she admitted what she had done, she apologised for her actions, she said she did have an anger issue and she had set out to protect her friend, as she saw it.
“It was a complete over-reaction to the situation she was faced with, but that’s what she did.”
Mother ‘shellshocked’
Her mother told the court she was “shellshocked” when she heard what her daughter had done, adding:
“She made the wrong friends and wrong choices and it just escalated from there.”
Mr Tinning said the girl had since been permanently excluded from school but was about to start at a new school where she could take her GCSEs. She was “academically gifted”, he said, and already had plans for the next steps in her career, supported by her mother.
She now had a part-time job and was at home every evening, the court heard, and had stopped associating with some of her previous friends.
The girls appeared at North Yorkshire Youth Court today
After magistrates retired to consider their sentence, bench chairman Alison Henny told the teenager they had seriously considered a term in a young offenders’ institute because of the severity of the attacks.
However, because of her age and her willingness to improve her behaviour, they had decided to give her a 12-month youth referral order during which she would be given support to make better choices and control her anger.
Mrs Henny said:
“The aim of the youth court is rehabilitation. We believe there’s a real prospect of you being rehabilitated.”
The magistrates ordered her mother to pay compensation of £100 for each of the injured PCSOs.
Meanwhile, a 14-year-old girl, also from Harrogate, has pleaded not guilty to assaulting an emergency worker by beating her, affray, and failing to comply with an exclusion order, at McDonald’s on the same date.
She is due to appear for trial at North Yorkshire Youth Court on November 25.
Another 14-year-old girl has already been dealt with by an out-of-court disposal through the youth outcomes panel in relation to the same incident.
Harrogate school pupil’s flower bed design for Queen’s Jubilee wins trophyA pupil of Ashville College in Harrogate has won the Harrogate in Bloom award for his flowerbed design to celebrate The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.
Children from schools across the town took part in the competition to design the flowerbed in Valley Gardens.
Jack Baier’s winning entry of more than 3,300 plants won the top award.
At the ceremony, year 7 Jack was presented with the Hammond Mann Trophy by former Yorkshire Agricultural Society chief executive Nigel Pulling.
The evening was attended by more than 60 guests, including the mayor of Harrogate, Cllr Victoria Oldham, and was the culmination of Harrogate BID’s Floral Summer of Celebration.
Jack’s colourful, winning design
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Other winners on the night included Helen James Flowers, Horticap, the White Hart Hotel, and Vivido.
To create the flowerbed, Harrogate Borough Council’s park and gardens team planted 800 Super Olympia Pink Begonias, 1,100 Super Olympia Red Begonias, 650 Non-Stop Yellow Begonias and 800 Mambo Mid Blue Petunias.
Pam Grant, Harrogate in Bloom President, said:
“We were delighted with the response to this particular competition category, and congratulate Jack on his winning design.
“Once translated from paper to flowerbed, it looked absolutely stunning, and was a fitting floral tribute to honour our dearly departed Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.”