About 400 people are expected to take part in tomorrow’s annual Nidderdale Charity Walk and Run.
The event, which is being held for the 29th year, has raised over £900,000 for charities since it started.
People will meet in Pateley Bridge from 7am before completing either four-mile, eight-mile, 15-mile, 22-mile or 26-mile routes.
The shortest route is around Wath while the longest is a challenging hike around Wath, Bouthwaite, Ramsgill and Lofthouse before returning via Scar House reservoir.

Registration is from 7am
Many participants are being sponsored to raise money for voluntary organisations, including Dementia Forward, Disability Action Yorkshire and Harrogate Homeless Project, while others just want to enjoy some of the country’s finest scenery in spring.
The routes are signposted and include checkpoints with medical help.
Brian Stuttard, chairman of the walk committee for the Rotary Club of Harrogate, which organises the event, said:
“About 320 people have registered so far and we expect another 100 or so on the day.”
Mr Stuttard said 40 junior soldiers from Harrogate’s Army Foundation College would be taking part in the four-mile route for the first time.

Nidderdale awaits
Registration begins at 7am and those taking part in the 22-mile and 26-mile routes are expected to depart by 8am. The shorter routes can start later.
It costs £10 for adults to enter (£5 for the four-mile walk) and you can enter on the day.
Read more:
- Fundraisers prepare to take on Nidderdale Walk this weekend
- Oscar-winning actress Kate Winslet visits Nidderdale pub for dinner
Photo of the Week: Through the Stray fog
This week’s photograph was taken by Chloe Morris, capturing a couple out walking their dog through the low-lying fog on the Stray.

Chloe Morris
Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.
Photo of the Week: Captain’s walk in the mistThis week’s photograph was taken by John Chadwick, featuring his wife Julie walking Captain the Lakeland Terrier across the Stray in this week’s mist.

John Chadwick
Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.
As part of Knaresborough’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations, there will be a free Union Jack flag-making workshop for kids who can take their flag on a procession through the town.
It’s been organised by the people who usually run the lantern-making workshops at Christmas. It will take place on Saturday June 4 at Gracious Street Methodist Church from 10am to 11am.
The event is free and there will be refreshments at the workshop although there will be a donations box. All materials will be provided and children must be accompanied by an adult.
The procession will led by the Town Crier from the Market Place at 11.30am to the grounds of Knaresborough House for the Jubilee Garden Party.
Knaresborough’s Jubilee plans
Starting on Thursday June 2, Knaresborough will light a beacon on the top of the castle, along with 1,500 locations across the UK.
On Saturday June 4 at Knaresborough House, there will be an artisan market in the morning followed in the afternoon by a community garden party and performances event. There will also be a tea dance at St Mary’s Church Hall.
On Sunday June 5 organisers hope to hold a thanksgiving service. Sunday is also set aside for street parties.
Throughout the weekend the new Knaresborough Museum will open in the former Castle Girls’ School with a special community history event to mark the jubilee.
For information about what’s on across the district over the big weekend. Click the box below.
Fundraisers prepare to take on Nidderdale Walk this weekend
Dozens of walkers will take to the paths of Nidderdale this weekend as a popular charity event returns.
Nidderdale Walk takes place on Sunday, May 8, offering participants a choice of five routes of between four and 26.2 miles.
The event, which is organised by the Rotary Club of Harrogate, has been taking place for almost three decades.
While it is promoted by 20 local charities which use it as a vital fundraiser in their calendars, participants can raise money for any cause of their choice.
Any of the local charities with 10 or more supporters taking part will also receive half of their entry fees back from the organisers.
Brian Stuttard, from the Rotary Club of Harrogate, said:
“The bigger charities have their own professional PR people and big budgets for events. Some of the smaller charities don’t have the opportunity to have an event for their own fundraising so we’re hopefully providing that role.”
Read more:
- Teams wanted for hospital charity ‘It’s a Knockout’ competition
- Harrogate woman with severe sight loss to walk 100km non-stop for charity
Last year, despite the covid pandemic, the Nidderdale Walk raised £18,000 when held in September.
Now back to its usual May date, organisers say the event has attracted a similar number of entrants this year compared to before the pandemic.
It begins at Pateley Bridge Scout Hut on Sunday morning, with the latest start times for the longest walks being 8am, up to 2pm for the shorter routes.
There are refreshment points along the routes, as well as cold drinks available at the end.
Entries will still be accepted on the day. For more information, visit the Nidderdale Walk website.
Conversion of former Harrogate Arms moves step closerBuilding work to convert the former Harrogate Arms pub on Crag Lane into a cafe has moved a step closer.
The horticultural charity RHS bought the building in 2014 and received planning permission in 2019 to create a ground floor cafe and kitchen facilities to serve visitors of neighbouring RHS Harlow Carr.
It has now submitted a construction management plan to Harrogate Borough Council that gives details about how contractors will go about the conversion.
It says work will include the demolition of extensions, partitions, a boundary wall and low wall.
It will also involve the erection of three single-storey extensions and a boundary wall; reduction of floor levels; widening of entrance; removal of fire escape; installation of replacement doors, windows and fanlights; alterations to fenestration; formation and restoration of hard and soft landscaping.
Work on site will take place from 8am to 6pm Monday to Friday and from 8am to 1pm on Saturday. There will be no work on Sundays or Bank Holidays.
The council will now consider the plan.
Hotel, nightclub, restaurant and pub
The Harlow Car Hotel and Bath House was built in 1844 by two businessmen following the discovery of an ‘especially efficacious’ sulphur spring in the area.
The hotel was sold to Harrogate Corporation in 1915 and has gone through a number of incarnations since then, as a nightclub, restaurant and latterly a pub.

The building in 1930. Credit – Archant
Read more:
- Government gives Harrogate district private school £8m a year to educate army children
- Firefighters called to Knaresborough pub
Sustainable menu
When the cafe opens in 2023, hospitality students from Harrogate College will devise the menu.
The students have been asked to use their culinary and creative skills to come up with a concept for a sustainable menu.
Fresh produce grown at the RHS gardens will feature prominently in the dishes.
Climate activists to march through HarrogateClimate change activists marching from Spain to the COP26 summit in Glasgow will pass through Harrogate on Saturday.
The group, which calls itself Marcha a Glasgow and has support from Extinction Rebellion Harrogate, set off from Bilbao last month and is stopping all the way up the UK during its 1,000-kilometre march.
It is due to arrive in Harrogate at about 6pm on Saturday.
The group wants to raise awareness of the effects of climate change and put pressure on governments to sign up to ambitious environmental commitments at COP26.
Nine Spanish activists are walking some 30 km a day but people can join them for sections by emailing here.
Read more:
- Organiser hails success of first event for Harrogate district climate festival
- Green Shoots: Why Harrogate should be at the vanguard of tackling climate change
The majority of the march will take place alongside roads because the group wants to make sure it is seen by as many people as possible.
A spokesperson for Marcha a Glasgow said:
Young fundraiser sets her sights higher after smashing target in 24 hours“We are surprised and very thankful for the warm welcomes we have received along our way in England so far. We need to take note of what the science is clearly saying and take responsibility.“This means changing our economic model, which is dependant on ever-growing CO2 emissions. We need to learn to find prosperity without abusing the natural world. There is much to be done!”
A schoolgirl from Harrogate who began a fundraising challenge today has already raised more than double her initial target.
Emily Caffrey, aged six, who has cerebral palsy and a brain malformation after being born prematurely, uses a walker and splints to get about.
She has decided to walk ten miles over the next week in support of NHS Charities Together. Her inspiration came from Captain Tom Moore, the Keighley veteran who has so far raised more than £24m by walking the length of his garden every day.
Mum Hannah said: “She watched him on the news. My husband is ex-military – he’s been out less than a year – and she said ‘that’s like Daddy’.
“The gentleman uses a walker, although it’s slightly different to hers, so she asked if she could raise money by walking too.”
Emily’s parents set a modest target of £500 in her online fundraiser to ensure it was achievable for her. Within 24 hours, however, having completed just one day of walking, her fundraising page had already surpassed £1,000.
“I think we’re going to have to raise the target,” said Hannah. “We were umm-ing and ahh-ing about whether to split it and add another charity, because of how much she’s raised.
“I know the NHS Charities Together are doing quite well, so I think we’re going to consider another local charity, because they’re really struggling.”

Emily is using her walker to complete a mile or more each day
Emily’s daily walks consist of at least a mile on the streets around her house in Harrogate, accompanied by her parents and three-year-old sister, Molly. The daily challenge will run until Emily’s birthday on Saturday, April 25th, with her mum posting updates to her Facebook page.
Missing her friends and teachers at Hookstone Chase Primary School, Emily’s route passes her best friend’s house where she’s often cheered on. As well as fresh air and exercise, the challenge gives her a new focus, after her planned birthday party at Mama Doreen’s in Harrogate had to be cancelled.
“This is the first year she’s realised it’s her birthday and it’s coming up,” said Hannah. “She doesn’t understand why she can’t see her friends – she just doesn’t get it.
“So this is something that’s keeping her occupied. Walking for an hour is a massive thing for her.”
