Harrogate district charity shops count the cost of lockdown

Many charities will be left counting the cost of another lockdown when their shops are forced to close tomorrow.

It took many stores a long time to re-open after the first lockdown and now their attempts to raise funds for charitable causes are to be hindered again.

Charity shops are a big part of the retail scene in Harrogate, Ripon, Knaresborough, Boroughbridge, Pateley Bridge and Masham.

Ripon’s 10th charity shop was all set to open, but Martin House will now have to wait at least a month before serving its first customers.

When the first lockdown of non-essential retailers ended in June, the charity, which provides family-led care for young people with life-limiting conditions, took over large premises on Fishergate.

Martin House’s £2.2m loss

At the time, the charity projected a £2.2 million loss of planned income stretching into summer 2021.

Stephanie Rimmington, the head of retail, said:

“The income we get from our shops is vital to helping Martin House raise the money we need to care for families in this area.”

Further down Fishergate, The Oxfam shop remains closed, having never reopened since the first covid lockdown in March.


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Saint Michael’s, which has shops in Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough, spends £6 million per year on hospice care from its base in Crimple Valley.

Photograph of Saint Michael's shop

Saint Michael’s has charity shops across the Harrogate district.

With one in three people in the Harrogate district requiring hospice care or support at some point in their lives, the demand for its services is unrelenting.

A Saint Michael’s spokesperson pointed out:

“We can only care for as many people as we have the funds to help.”

The money required is £15,000 a day and there is reliance on the income from retail shops, alongside bequests, personal donations and fundraising events, which pay for 80 percent of the charity’s work.

British Heart Foundation shop closure

Today marks the last day of trading for the British Heart Foundation books and music shop in Beulah Street, Harrogate.

Like the clothing and bric-a-brac shop it once had further down the street, it will not be reopening.

While shops close, either temporarily or for good, all of the organisations involved – both local and national – continue their work despite the difficult times that they face.

In an appeal for financial donations, the British Heart Foundation, said:

“Covid has put people with heart and circulatory conditions at greater risk than ever. But the effects of the virus have also cut our lifesaving research in half. Slowing down now would put even more lives at stake.

“At a time when hearts need help now more than ever, we urgently need your support.”

Though the shops are closed, there are other ways of supporting the work of all charities and details can be found on their respective websites.

Book tells story of Nidderdale in lockdown

At the height of the coronavirus crisis, Helen Flynn, co-chair of Nidderdale Plus, vowed that nobody in Nidderdale or the Washburn Valley would go without help.

The community hub based in Pateley Bridge has been playing a key administrative role in marshalling an army of volunteers.

Among the 600 people to come forward was a team from Bewerley Park Outdoor Learning Centre – itself temporarily closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The centre’s instructors Ian Coates and Heather Tuffs, along with trainees Byrony Hart and Rowan Bonney rallied to the call.

Over four months, they walked, cycled and drove thousands of miles, making free deliveries of vital items to people stuck in their homes.

Photograph of Jenny and Frank Braithwaite

Jenny and Frank Braithwaite, who were among the hundreds of people in Nidderdale to receive home deliveries during the coronavirus lockdown

Help for people in self-isolation continues, but is not as intensive as it was at the outset, when the team worked six days a week.

Over the period, a close working relationship grew between the Bewerley team and the Chandler family, whose Spar Shop, at the foot of Pateley Bridge High Street, became a centre for handling telephone orders and assembling and distributing boxes and bags containing food, drink, prescriptions, pet supplies and other essential items.


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The goods were supplied by the Spar shop and a host of other retailers in the town.

While making her deliveries on a bicycle with a trailer provided by Bewerley Park’s former head, Sam Cook, Heather Tuffs was also collecting stories, messages of thanks, photographs, anecdotes, poems and hand-drawn pictures for a book which she has called Lockdown 2020.

Heather told the Stray Ferret:

“I was inspired by the way in which the Chandlers were going the extra mile to help people and thought it needed to be recorded and recognised that, at a time of need in Nidderdale, they rose to the occasion.”

She added:

“It was also a way for me to say thank you for being able to meet so many lovely people in parts of Nidderdale I’d hadn’t previously been to.”

After hard days of pedal-powered deliveries – some of them involving the steep climb up Greenhow Hill – Heather wrote, designed and published her book, paying for it from donations made by the people who appear in it.

Its 160 pages capture the community’s response to the coronavirus crisis.

Retailers such as Kendall’s and Weatherhead butchers, fishmonger Fish With a Twist, Pateley Bridge Pharmacy, Park View Stores, Dales Market Corner, the Sandwich Box, worked in collaboration with the Chandler Spar Shop, Nidderdale Plus, The Rev Daryl Hall and countless volunteers.

The publication, which includes a touching reference to husband, father and grandfather Colin Chandler, who died in November 2007, came as a complete surprise to the family.

Speaking on behalf of them, Lee Chandler, said:

“We already know that Heather is a very special, kind and caring person and her book, which brings both smiles and tears, is something that we will treasure for the rest of our lives. We’re sure Dad would have been proud.”

 

Ripon’s Himalayan Gardens seeks 40 volunteers

The Himalayan Garden and Sculpture Park near Ripon is recruiting 40 new volunteer rangers.

The site has been growing in size in recent years. The gardens are now set over 45 acres and it is becoming increasingly difficult to look after the space.

To try and combat that, the gardens has launched a Natural Health Service volunteer drive and it’s not just for gardeners.

They hope that it will help those who have been made redundant as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.


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Stephen Ward, the new head gardener, used his personal experience of redundancies to shape the initiative. He said:

“The trials and tribulations I have been through are what thousands of people are going through at this time. I want to help those people by providing a place for them to come to that will help them to move on to something better.”

The coronavirus pandemic has been difficult for the Himalayan Garden and Sculpture Park. They missed out on their peak season. As a result, they are looking at ways they can keep the revenue coming in during the winter months.

Part of the plans include Christmas bundles, heading out to Christmas markets with their products and even taking their converted horse box cafe to events. The gardens will close as usual in November so these could make a big difference.

Anyone interested in volunteering for the Himalayan Garden and Sculpture Park near Ripon can find out more on their website. Mr Ward has said he will take people for a site visit and chat with them about their skills.

The garden’s believe they have the north’s largest collection of rhododendrons, azaleas, and magnolias with nearly 20,000 plants

Winner of Yorkshire in Bloom Tourist Attraction Award for 2018 and 2019, and Best Business Award 2019, the park is also home to over 80 Contemporary Sculptures.

Nidderdale Museum delays reopening with volunteers in self-isolation

Nidderdale Museum had planned to reopen next month but many of its volunteers are self-isolating or shielding.

Without its regular supply of volunteers, it will likely stay closed until October and even then just on weekends for three hours.

The museum had put in a one-way system and pause points as well as hand sanitising stations and a self-service contactless payment system.


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Now the museum has launched an appeal for volunteers between 16 and 69 years old. They have asked volunteers to get in touch before August 8.

Sue Welch, chairman of the Nidderdale Museum, told The Stray Ferret:

“There are various other museums in Yorkshire that are saying they are likely to have the same problems because many of their volunteers are over 70. I am afraid it is a known issue. People that volunteer are often older people and particularly museum volunteers. Although this is an immediate need we are hoping it will bear fruit for the future as well.”

The government gave the museums the go-ahead to reopen from July 4. However, many may be in the same position as Nidderdale Museum.

Nidderdale Museum had been working towards an exhibition celebrating the 700th anniversary of the Markets and Fair Charter to Pateley Bridge but may need to delay until 2021.

Harrogate charity for vulnerable predicts more calls for help

Harrogate Easier Living Project (HELP) is preparing for an increase of calls for help from people after coronavirus.

Requests to the charity for food bank and supermarket vouchers have already increased. It says help for practical jobs could also increase as people struggle financially.

From April to June it has supported over 500 families and individuals. Over lockdown it provided a variety of help including dropping off books and puzzles to those isolating and moving beds for covid patients returning from hospital.

The charity was initially “overwhelmed” at the beginning of the pandemic but it was able to recruit over 200 volunteers to help it as demand increased.

Lizzie Hughes, Project Development Worker, said that as lockdown eases people will still need their help:

“Whilst we are receiving fewer urgent requests for support and emergency food shopping now, we are still carrying out on average around 120 tasks every week for people in Harrogate and Ripon. A number of people are struggling financially and we’re seeing a lot more people needing to access the food banks or asking us to apply for supermarket vouchers for them.

“Physical and mental health may prevent some local residents from being able to fully participate in community life for some time to come. We also anticipate an increase in demand for practical help with jobs that have built up during lockdown and need arising from economic hardship exacerbated by the virus.”

A volunteer from HELP takes their pony to meet an isolating couple to cheer them up.

Gill, a HELP volunteer, took her pony Maple for a socially distant walk round the houses of some of HELP’s isolating clients to cheer them up.


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The organisation offers a support network for those in need of help across Harrogate and Ripon. Over lockdown HELP has been working with the most vulnerable to assist them in any way they need.

Lizzie added:

“From April to June, we supported an additional 501 families and individuals, carried out 822 shopping trips and 112 people received befriending phone calls. We appreciate that doing someone’s shopping isn’t going to be the answer to all their problems so we have been making welfare calls to all our clients offering them additional support.”

 

Harrogate district girlguides spread a little sunshine during lockdown

Volunteers across the district have been maintaining girlguiding during lockdown with a Sunflower Challenge.

Created as a way to keep in touch with local girlguides, the sunflower challenge involves making a sunflower out of whatever materials you can find,  from house hold objects to paints and crayons. These sunflowers are then shared on facebook and have also been made into a video on YouTube.

Sunflower created by a girlguide from 4th Bilton Brownies

The Sunflower Challenge aims to spread happiness and fun to girlguiding members during lockdown. Over 1,000 girls across the County and the UK have taken part in the challenge with numbers growing daily.

County Commisioner for Girlguiding North Yorkshire West said:

“Our volunteers are so committed to encouraging, inspiring and building confidence in our members right through the Girlguiding sections, from Rainbows at age 5 up to our teenage Rangers, while having fun at the same time!

Their continued dedication to Guiding for all our members during this time is something we’re very proud of.”

 


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As well as creating their own sunflowers, girlguides are also given a sunflower seed in order to grow their own, with the ultimate challenge being to grow the biggest sunflower.

Sunflower drawn by Megan, young leader at the 28

Mia aged 7 who is a rainbow said:

“The Sunflower Challenge has been really fun. I’ve planted my seed and looked after it. I’ve been watching it grow and hope it might be the tallest!”

Members of all ages have taken part in the challenge with volunteers varying widely form students, stay at home mums and adults who work.

 

If you would like to take part in the challenge, more details can be found on the Girlguiding North Yorkshire West website: http://www.girlguidingnyw.org.uk/sunflower-challenge

 

Volunteers in Ripon and Studley Roger use sewing skills to support health workers

Production of much-needed PPE for health workers in Harrogate and Ripon forms a common thread that links Eileen Jordan, Janet Collins, Caroline Lodge and numerous other people across the Harrogate district.

All have responded to urgent appeals made through social media, for people to either provide material, or use their sewing skills to support the NHS and staff working in care homes.

Hundreds of items, vital to the protection of healthcare workers in both the public and private sectors,  including full sets of scrubs, masks, scrubs bags and head bands, have been produced and distributed, with support from family, friends, neighbours and businesses.

Eileen (pictured above) who lives in Ripon has, with the help of husband Martin, produced almost 200 masks and is now turning her attention to making scrubs bags, with material donated by people such as Caroline Lodge, whose Rosie and Clover home furnishings shop in Westgate, Ripon, is closed because of the coronavirus crisis.

Eileen, whose husband is a retired Staff Sergeant who served with the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, told The Stray Ferret: “I saw a FaceBook post calling for sewers to lend a hand in producing masks and decided to volunteer. I was put in contact with Janet, my ‘sewing buddy’ and it is great to be working with her.

She added:

“When I turned to making bags for scrubs, Martin was very helpful and a 15 metre length of parachute chord that he had in the garage, has come in very handy to act as ties for them.”

Janet, who is Australian, called on the help of friends and neighbours in Studley Roger and said: “I asked if they had spare sheets and duvet covers, that I could use as the material for making scrubs and was amazed by the number of items donated. My husband David is kept busy cutting out the patterns, while I do the sewing. The finished items are then sent to be laundered at 60 degrees before they are distributed to health workers.”

She added:

“We were due to visit Australia at the end of March, but our flights were cancelled. I suppose if we had been allowed to travel, I would have been making sets of scrubs for Australian healthcare workers.”

In addition to working with Eileen, Janet has been joined by two neighbours in Studley Roger, who are also putting their sewing skills to good use and both women would like to encourage anybody with a sewing machine and time to spare, to join the PPE production line, by contacting a group such as Harrogate Sewers for Face Masks, whose details can be found on FaceBook.

WATCH:Volunteers across the district provide vital support to those in isolation

As the UK lockdown is extended for a minimum of three more weeks, the work of volunteers continue to provide a vital service for those who are self-isolating.

From mobile post offices to weekly care packages, volunteers from across the borough are going the extra mile to help those who need it.

 

 

 

WATCH: Harrogate Hospital volunteers want to ‘give something back.’

On Saturday, Harrogate Hospital  made an ‘urgent appeal’ for more volunteers as the Coronavirus pandemic worsens. A spokesperson from the Hospital has since posted  to say they have been ‘overwhelmed’ with the rapid response from the community. We have been speaking to some of those who have applied to volunteer.