Science Festival 2025 is over, another full week of diverse entertaining, surprising, challenging and informative topics. Our thanks go out to Otley Courthouse and all the presenters and helpers that made it possible. Here’s a small sample of the action:
Kicking off on Sunday 9th November Otley Science Festival 2025 is going to be another great week with something for everyone. We begin with with an exciting daytime family friendly show then run through the week with a range of evening events, a Friday matinee and the popular Science Fair on the final Saturday plus daytime schools events for KS1 and KS2 students and a supporting art exhibition running alongside.
Here’s what happening:
The Science Viking, a show for all the family
Art Exhibition Launch of “An Exhibition By Numbers”
Festival week Science Café
Film: David Attenborough’s Ocean
The Science of Wine with David Lawson of Otley wine merchant Chez Vin
The Cost of Blood with Dr Jack Gann of the Thackray Museum of Medicine
A Climate of Truth with Professor Mike Berners-Lee
the ever popular, family oriented Science Fair
The Hidden Mathematics of Knitting with Alison Kiddle
We’re off with planning for this year’s Science Festival, so you can put the dates in your diary. We’re planning to begin with a family show on Sunday 9th November and close out with the Fair and our last speaker on Saturday 15th. In between will be our usual enticing selection of science based events and daytime schools shows for KS1 and KS2 pupils.
Full details will follow in due course.
Plus, of course, in the meantime there will be our regular Science Cafés currently scheduled for March 27th and June 26th, with one to follow in September, date tbc.
We made a decision in mid ’24 that it felt right for us to join the X-odus, at some time after the Science Festival. So that is what we are doing.
If you’ve been following us on X, thank you for your past support, but for ’25 would you please switch to join us on any (or all) of the usual suspect alternatives.
You can also now find us under the “otleyscience” identity on Bluesky, Threads, Instagram and continuing as we have long been on Facebook. Plus, of course, here.
Our final Tweet/post is on January 3rd and (in case you miss(ed) it) reads:
“That’s it, we’re off. It’s been great but sadly we no longer feel comfortable sharing this space, as we are and always will be advocates for the enjoyment of truth and understanding through science. We hope you may join us where we are seeking a more welcoming home.”
We look forward to seeing you wherever suits you best.
Another great range of events and a really popular Fair day. Thanks as ever to our presenters, stall holders and volunteers who made it possible. And, of course, thanks to everyone who came to join us. Here’s a small look back at some of the activities:
Lastly, I’m going to pick out one chart from Friday’s presentation “When Antarctica Was Green” by Dame Professor Jane Francis, Director of the British Antarctic Survey. It shows the results of using ice cores to directly see CO2 levels over the last 800,000 years (well beyond the arrival of homo sapiens).
At no time over those years was CO2 above 300ppm. It is now 422ppm. She said that in the past, when it was above 400ppm sea levels were 5-10m higher than they are now…
You can find more photos from this year and from past Festivals on our Flickr group at https://flic.kr/g/gvMsL
Who wants the holiday season to end? Some do, some don’t, but we do bring you a compensation because here comes the September Science Café. Here’s our lovely poster and you can find all the details on the Science Cafés page.
Things can only get better… maybe. No, let’s be positive. Long summer days are nearly here and so is the June Science Café. Below is the poster, or you can follow the link for all the information on the Science Café page
Here’s a quick look back at some bits of this year’s festival. Thanks to everyone who helped make it happen, the Courthouse, all our excellent presenters and of course you, the people who came.
And so on to 2024, starting with our first Science Café on Thursday March 14th. You can find all our dates for the year on our calendar page here.