Swifts Awareness Event, Helmsley 8 July

Jonathan Pomroy presents this event at NGalleries in Helmsley on July 8th, 2023 for Swift Awareness Week.

Jonathan Pomroy has worked to record details of the Swift populations and habits in our area for many years. Which has in turn helped to support and protect swifts in North Yorkshire and why we are linking with a charity to help with their work to protect and rehab swifts https://www.startbirding.co.uk/leeds-swifts/

Swifts are in decline sadly and this is an opportunity to find out more of these beautiful birds or what to do if you found one on the ground! NGalleries is organising the following event to promote awareness.

Exhibition watercolour paintings by Jonathan Pomroy.

Guided walk led by Jonathan duration 45 mins to enjoy watching swifts around the town,

Demonstration sketching when we return materials provided.

Helmsley may have a healthy population but the reality is that swift populations have declined by 58% in the last 25 years. Along with house martins they were added to the Birds of Conservation Concern Red List in 2021. By installing nest boxes Helmsley Swifts are securing nest sites for many pairs of swifts, but crucially they are also surveying the town for existing nest sites. The organisation wants to educate people how to spot a swift nest site – if for example a roof needs refurbishing we can advise on preserving that site or providing alternative nesting opportunities.

NGalleries offers a fine viewpoint to watch swifts and house martins above Helmsley. For more information, contact:

NGalleries, 7 Barkers Yard, Helmsley, YO62 5DR
Tel: 01439 772 010 & 07900 998242. www.ngalleries.co.uk.

Malton Museum – July Events 2023

As well as the Malton Roman Festival, Malton Museum has several exhibitions, talks and tours going on this summer:

Malton Roman Festival

This is the main event of the summer, following up on the success of last year’s inaugural event.  Taking place at Orchard Fields on Sunday 23rd July (10:30 to 15:30), there will be an action-packed day of live-action demonstrations and living history displays that we hope will appeal to adults and children alike. This is a perfect time to point out that there is an early-bird discount on tickets for adults and family groups purchased prior to 1st July.  See the museum’s website for more details and to book tickets.

Summer Lectures

The third lecture of the 2023 Summer Lecture Series takes place on Thursday 6th July (7pm).  ‘Through Fire and Flames: The History of Malton’s Fire Brigade’, by on-call firefighter Ian Orledge.  Please see the attached poster for all the details.  Currently the museum also has a special exhibition of items from Ian’s collection on display, giving fascinating insights into an important part of our local history.

Town Tours

During the Summer months most of the town tours take place during the evening, when we can enjoy a very different view of the town while it is quieter.  There are 2 tours arranged for July:

River, Road and Railway” follows the story of Malton’s trade and transport systems through several centuries.  This takes place on Wednesday 12th July at 7pm.  Cost is £8 per person.

Horses in Malton” is a new tour exploring Malton’s strong connection with horses from before Roman Times right through to the town’s prime importance as a centre of horse racing today.  This takes place on Tuesday 25th July at 7pm.  Cost is £8 per person.

Bookings for all events can be made on the museum website.  https://www.maltonmuseum.co.uk/events/

Ryedale Festival bring Dudok Quartet to Slingsby, 22 July

The Ryedale Festival presents the fabulous Dudok Quartet. With infectious energy and consoling melodies, they perform two of Tchaikovsky’s wonderful string quartets. The group are joined by Siân Dicker to perform luminous music by Lili Boulanger, one of the most exciting composers of the early 20th century, until her death at the age of just 24.

At All Saints’ Church in Slingsby on Saturday 22 July, the Dudok Quartet bring to a close their complete cycle of Tchaikovsky’s music for string quartet, which starts in Hovingham on 19 July and continues at Birdsall House on 20 July. Don’t miss this rare opportunity to hear music from the most melodic and emotional of composers! 

Coffee (in Village Hall) from 9.45am, pre-concert talk at 10am, concert at 11am.

Tickets available online: at: https://ryedalefestival.com/event/26-coffee-concert-dudok-quartet/

Slingsby Chapel Summer Notice

There’s plenty happening at Slingsby Chapel over the next couple of months, including regular Sunday worship services and also various dates for the diary around Ryedale. More information and dates can be found below:

Parish Council Response to 2nd Planning Application (South of Aspen Way)

As promised in an earlier post, below is the Parish Council’s response to the second planning application for land south of Aspen Way, which was published in May. More information about this can be found in our earlier post about the application here.

The Parish Council’s response:

Having read through the information provided for the Erection of 13 no. dwellings (APPLICATION NO:
23/00348/MFUL), taken consultation from residents within the Parish and referenced the plans against
the recent parish survey, the Parish Council has significant concerns.
The Parish Council is extremely concerned that a site that was originally approved in outline as one site
to be developed, has now turned into two applications/schemes, which do not complement each other in
any way, shape or form. A site which was to be ‘the gateway to Slingsby’ is fast turning into Cinderella’s
carriage at midnight!
Can the planning authority confirm that this split site approach is able to be taken forward?

  • The Parish Council along with all residents consulted have serious concern regarding the phased
    approach of development. The initial planning application (outline approval 18/00686/MOUT dated
    12.03.2020) assumed that the whole site would be developed as one phase and as such, the Parish
    Council had no objections. This application could be developed on a different timescale to the other
    application by a different developer. The new application makes no reference to the integration or
    timescales of the second phase of development. This raises several significant issues regarding the
    initial development and the completion of landscaping, utilities etc as well as the visual impact of an
    unfinished or incomplete site. Without guarantees that the whole site will be developed to a satisfactory
    standard in a timely manner, it is impossible to give the support to any part thereof.
  • The affordable housing provision has been placed together. To achieve better social cohesion,
    dispersing the affordable housing across the whole of the site would be much preferable.
  • In the design and access statement, it references a local farm shop. Slingsby does not have a farm
    shop and any development would add greater strain to the limited resources and amenities that do exist. Similarly, the local village school is currently at capacity and some children living in the parish do not have places at Slingsby school. Additional family homes at the proposed number would add even greater strain and competition for limited places.
  • The village has ongoing issue with surface water flooding and the addition of significant number of
    houses at the elevated south end of the village is likely to have increased surface flooding impacts on the lower lying areas of the village, predominantly Railway Street. The Ryedale District Plan 2013 page 109, section 6 referencing utilities in service villages identified that Slingsby had ‘no current capacity’ and ‘upgrading will be required’ with respect to sewers.
  • The Parish Council has a particular concern regarding the lack of detail over the future management
    and liability of the green spaces, trees and hedges created by both applications. There is little reference
    to the process by which existing trees and hedges need regular maintenance, and the new landscaping
    will be managed, and maintained. If it is to come under a management company with shared
    responsibility lying with the new residents, full planning, risk assessment and work plans (including
    liability and insurance details) should be defined.
  • There are also strong concerns from within the village as to the increased stress on already busy roads
    and the amount of traffic more houses will bring. Adding another access point to potentially later change to a pedestrian/cycle route will allow additional traffic further into Aspen Way increasing unnecessarily quiet cul de sac. The Balk is a relatively narrow road, which takes the majority of the traffic in and out of the village, including all heavy goods and agricultural vehicles. A positive step for the developers would have been to address this issue and look at ways of maximising the flow of traffic through the Balk.
  • Finally, the parish council would like to see a clearer awareness of and mitigation strategy for the buried
    archaeology likely to be encountered on the site. The Balk is located within a highly sensitive
    archaeological area, between two large, nationally important scheduled areas (NHLE Iron Age barrow
    cemetery to the east and NHLE 1004178 Slingsby Castle, to the west). In particular, the site lies along
    the line of the Iron Age trackway and barrow cemetery to the east, as identified by Historic England’s
    Howardian Hills Aerial Mapping project (HE NMP p.15) fig.1. The trackway lies directly in the path of the
    proposed development, yet no mention is made of its significance in the Design and Access Statement
    and there are no details of the findings made during preliminary explorations of the site last year to mirror the ecology reports submitted as part of this reserved matters application. We note that Historic England as a Statutory Consultee has expressed concerns about the absence of clear reference to
    archaeological mitigation under the terms of the NPPF (para 194) and the Listed Buildings and
    Conservation Areas Act (1990) 72(1) and 38(6) and would repeat their request for reassurance that the
    original archaeological conditions apply and will be adhered to in the revised proposals.
    We ask the Planning Authority to take our concerns about a two-site approach very seriously as this
    could have a long-lasting effect on the visual amenity of Slingsby along with the residents who will have
    to live through a two scheme build.

Slingsby, South Holme and Fryton Parish Council

Slingsby Duck Race 15 July

Saturday 15 July, 11am to 3pm, Slingsby Sports Field

Want to sponsor a duck? The FoSS team will be at Hovingham market on Saturday 1 July. Look out too at the Slingsby Car Boot sale this Sunday 18 June.