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Out & About
The Worth Valley has a wealth of tourist and leisure attractions. We aim to highlight the best indoor and outdoor activities in the area.
Eating Out
Reviews and advertorials of the best places to eat in the area. From cream teas to chicken tikka masala we have informative and entertaining guides on a monthly basis.
Pubs, Clubs & Entertainment
Advertorials and reviews of pubs in the Worth Valley. Real ale, pub grub and the best entertainment on offer.
Shops & Services
Butcher, Baker or Candlestick Maker, this page will give you a glimpse of what's going on behind the scenes with profiles of local traders and businesses.
Out & About

“…Each year, Haworth West Lane Baptist A.O.S. stages one of the Gilbert and Sullivan Comic Operas. Our producer, Michael Lofthouse, is well known in the area for his innovative settings, stretching
the traditional view of the Savoy Operas.….”
Click here to open magazine with full article (see page 22-23)

“…All this rain make's it feel like we're still waiting for the summer to start!
But healthy attendances to last years Haworth Arts Festival, which took place in a downpour,
showed that Yorkshire folk don't let a bit of rain put them off getting out and enjoying themselves.….”
Click
here to open magazine with full article (see page 16-17)

“…Local legend has it that the unwed will find a mate within ‘a year and a day’ if they crawl through the narrow crevice in the large boulder of the Kirk. Penistone Crag of “Wuthering Heights” is based on
Ponden Kirk.….”
Click here to open magazine with full article (see page 11)

“….St Michael’s has a peal of six bells installed with money raised by Patrick Brontë in 1845. After a period of disuse in the sixties and seventies, the bells were overhauled and rehung in 1988 and there has been a band of ringers ever since. Unfortunately, we are now so short of ringers that there is a danger that the Brontë bells will again fall silent….”
Click here to open magazine with full article (see page 27)

“….St Michael’s has a peal of six bells installed with money raised by Patrick Brontë in 1845. After a period of disuse in the sixties and seventies, the bells were overhauled and rehung in 1988 and there has been a band of ringers ever since. Unfortunately, we are now so short of ringers that there is a danger that the Brontë bells will again fall silent….”
Click here to open magazine with full article (see page 27)

"...It was five years ago when a small group of dedicated Haworth traders and individuals in the community banded together to gain Fairtrade Village status for our cobbled country village.
At that point, few were familiar with the Fairtrade Foundation, the non-government organisation that campaigns for a fairer playing field for farmers and their families in the developing world..."
Click here to open magazine with full advertorial (see page 4)

"...The railway is justifiably proud that its painstaking attention to detail pays off so handsomely. It is a railway for all seasons, where winter visitors can see the stations bathed in gaslight and warm themselves in front of the coal fires in the waiting rooms. In summer, the station gardens are alive with blooms. ...."
Click here to open magazine with full advertorial (see page 14-15)

"...Painting a piece of pottery, sipping a cappuccino, and socialising with friends in a relaxed environment is a wonderful way to spend a few hours in the week.
You can do all of this and more in the friendly new art café, Cobbles & Clay, situated in the heart of Haworth's main street...."
Click here to open magazine with full advertorial (see page 6-7)

"... Depending on the time of your walk, the moor will be busy with grouse, skylarks, lapwings and the ever changing colours of the heather... "
Click here to open magazine with full article (see page 4)


