Two 1958 anthology dramas from CBUT Vancouver served as prototypes or pilots for the series: "The Window at Namko" (
Spectrum series) and "Justice on the Jawbone" (
Vancouver Playbill series). The first complete
Cariboo Country series (1960) consisted of 13 episodes produced on video in the CBUT Vancouver studio and
kinescoped for national distribution. They were broadcast on CBUT from June 16 to September 8, 1960. Episodes were directed by Frank Goodship, Philip Keatley, and Len Lauk. The series returned in 1964, with a larger budget, and continued until 1966. This iteration of the series was produced on film, with location shooting in Richmond and in the
Chilcotin. Philip Keatley (1929–2007) directed all 16 filmed episodes. The series was broadcast nationally on the CBC anthology series
The Serial. Two related programs were broadcast nationally in the
Festival series. The first was an hour-long version combining parts 1 & 2 of "The Education of Phyllistine" (1965), which won a Canadian Film Award for best television film of the year. Its success led to the production of the standalone hour-long episode "How to Break a Quarterhorse" [sic], which was also broadcast on
Festival (1966). == Book and film adaptations ==