United Kingdom The series also had a successful run on the
ITV network in the United Kingdom.
A Country Practice began on Wednesday, 27 October 1982 – less than a year after its debut on
Seven Network in Australia. Originally, the series was partially networked (similar in theory to
syndication) by
Thames Television, the weekday contractor for the London area, to a cluster of five
ITV regions;
Anglia Television,
Border Television,
Tyne Tees,
Yorkshire Television and
TVS. These regions all aired one weekly episode on Wednesdays at 14:45–15:45, and in the original, hour-long format. The remaining ITV contractors:
Central Independent Television,
Channel Television,
HTV,
TSW,
Granada Television,
Scottish Television,
UTV, and
Grampian Television – all started later, with
UTV being the last to start in late 1989. Of the broadcast years covering 1982 through to 1989, all of the
ITV regions began scheduling the program on a day and at a time of their own choice, but most generally continued with the weekly hour-long format. The slower pace of one weekly episode all year round (as opposed to
two in Australia for ten months, Feb-Nov) meant that UK broadcasts quickly fell behind Australia, and the regions were all at vastly different points in the storyline by 1988 when the serial was put on hiatus in a handful of areas for a new Australian series,
Richmond Hill, which took the Wednesday and Thursday afternoon 14:00 slot from October. When that series ended in August the following year,
A Country Practice was resumed as its replacement (although some regions, such as Thames, TSW, TVS, and Granada, had continued to show it). By around May 1990 (regions do vary), the ITV network decided to change how it broadcast episodes of
A Country Practice. Each franchise adopted the method of editing each episode into two half-hour editions, which allowed the series to be stripped Monday to Friday, usually before, or after, the lunchtime edition of
Home and Away. This half-hour format of airing the series had already been established by Yorkshire Television from October 1984, TVS from 1987, Thames from 1988, and due to the backlog of episodes now available, stripped half-hour editions could air uninterrupted (except on bank holidays etc) and at an increased output of up to two and a half episodes each week. This format did however result in the curtailment of the full closing credits in certain regions from January 1994. Scottish Television was the only exception, and they chose various days and timeslots, but always screened
A Country Practice in the original hour-long format. A substantial amount was withdrawn from transmission by some regions as the content was considered unsuitable for daytime viewing and this inevitably led to considerable chunks of the story being skipped. Considered a daytime soap,
A Country Practice was popular in the UK and achieved consolidated viewing figures of between 2–3 million. Some regions (HTV, Border, Grampian, TSW and Granada) moved the later episodes of the series to an early evening slot of 17.10–17.40.
ITV regional broadcasts • Originally starting in 1982,
Yorkshire Television were the first region to break away from the networked transmissions in October 1984 and began editing each episode into two half-hour episodes, screening on Mondays and Tuesdays at 15:30. This led to continuity problems as whenever a public holiday occurred (on Monday), the 15:30 slot would be unavailable. The series was moved back to an early afternoon hour-long format in 1988 when
Sons and Daughters was aired five afternoons a week at 15:30.
A Country Practice then replaced
Sons and Daughters when that series ended in March 1989, again split into half-hour episodes and shown five afternoons a week for the first time. In 1990, it was then moved to earlier afternoon, 13:50–14:00, and eventually, hour-long episodes were reinstated. The series concluded in March 1998 and the Network Ten series was not shown. When
Tyne Tees Television merged with Yorkshire, a number of episodes were skipped. This was to allow an alignment of schedules for the two regions. • After initially airing weekly hour-long episodes (usually on Wednesdays) from 1982, both
TVS and
Thames Television followed Yorkshire's example of showing half-hour episodes each week. TVS initially used 14:00-14:30 from 1987 before following Thames with the 12:30–13:00, Monday to Wednesday, slot, from 1988. In 1990, both of these regions adopted the 13:50–14:20 time, on various days and frequency. •
Central Television originally began
A Country Practice in July 1983, airing weekly on Tuesday mornings, 11:10–12:00, during the summer of 1983, but by September, the series had been shelved. Several years later in the spring of 1990 - while all the other ITV regions were well into their respective runs – Central re-launched the series, and followed Thames, Yorkshire, and TVS with half-hour episodes, starting with the first episode of the 1982 season. In May, it appeared in an early-afternoon slot, 14:00-14:30, Monday to Friday, and in September 1990, this changed slightly to 13:50–14:20. From January 1993, moves to 13:15–13:45, and then briefly switches to mid-afternoon in September 1993, and then 15:00–15:30 until the end of that year. Returns to 14:50–15:20 until March 1994, after which, it is moved back to lunchtimes at 13:55–14:25. By 1997, Central was airing
A Country Practice at 12:55–13:25, and in 1998, the network concluded the original series in April in the 13:00–13:30 slot, and then immediately commenced the short-lived, 30-episode
Network Ten version, finally completing all the episodes on Friday, 31 July 1998. •
Scottish Television started broadcasting the series in 1983 and always aired
A Country Practice as hour-long episodes. Throughout the 1980s the program moved about in time and day but was generally broadcast once a week in an afternoon slot. In January 1994, after (episode #486), it was dropped from the schedules for about 4 months until June. From episode 491 screened every weekday morning at 10:55 for the duration of the summer school holidays (around 6 weeks) until 2 September. It reverted to its old weekly Tuesday slot the following week. It was the dropped completely after episode #588, during April 1995 replaced by Blue Heelers. Although the company took over
Grampian Television, the series continued until the end. The Series switched to 30min format in 1995, by Summer 1998 was being screened each week day. •
HTV started the series on Wednesday, 26 October 1983, broadcasting 1 hour episodes [most] Wednesdays, 14:00–14:55, until 1990, when the series moved to 15:25, Wednesday to Friday as replacement for
Sons and Daughters in half-hour format for the first time on HTV. This briefly increased to Monday-Friday, but from September 1993, it's moved to earlier time, 13:50–14:20, and only twice weekly. In March 1994, it began airing in the early evening, 17:10–17:40. By the end of 1998, the series had been reduced again to being shown on Thursdays and Fridays only. From January to March 1999, the series was shown on Tuesday through to Friday until Friday 5 March 1999 when the final Channel Seven episode was reached. HTV were the last ITV region to complete the series (and did not show the short lived Channel 10 series). •
Carlton Television superseded
Thames Television in January 1993, and they continued to air the series using the 13:50–14:20 timeslot. In January 1995, Carlton launched a new Australian series,
Blue Heelers, and it took the 14:50–15:20 slot, Monday to Wednesday, and a new series from New Zealand
Shortland Street in the 13:55 slot on Monday, Wednesday and Friday with
A Country Practice on Tuesday and Thursday, and this pattern continued until they became the first region to reach the last episode, on 25 April 1996.
Anglia Television was next to finish in 1997, and they then began a short repeat of the first 40 episodes. •
Granada Television originally began with a regular weekly episode on Thursdays, 14:00–15:00, from January 1984. This continued until mid-1990, when Granada decided to follow the majority of ITV regions with the half-hourly stripped format, broadcast at lunchtime, Monday to Friday, 13:50–14:20. During 1994 until the autumn of 1996, the series was moved to the early-evening 17:10–17:40 timeslot, Monday to Thursday – in September 1996, however, it returned to 13:50–14:20, and now airing Tuesday to Friday. By January 1998, hour-long episodes had been reinstated, and these aired on Mondays and Fridays, 13:55–14:45, and this continued until the end of the series in April 1998.
Border Television had, by now, aligned with Granada's run of the series and followed their broadcast schedule. •
TSW and
Channel Television did not begin until 1984, and initially aired
A Country Practice weekly on Tuesdays at 14:00–15:00. In August 1989, TSW added an additional hour long episode on Thursdays (replacing
Richmond Hill). In 1990, TSW followed the rest of the English ITV regions and aired five, half-hour episodes, Monday to Friday, at lunchtimes. In January 1993,
Westcountry Television took over the regional franchise, and they moved the series to 15:20-15:50, then from September 1993 the series was moved to 14.55, until they concluded the series in 1997. Due to changes in their networking arrangements, Channel Television aligned with TVS broadcasts rather than TSW broadcasts from January 1986, meaning some episodes were skipped in the Channel Islands. •
TVS was replaced by
Meridian Television on 1 January 1993 and the company continued to air
A Country Practice. The original 7 Network series concluded in April 1997, and then Meridian immediately commenced the Network Ten series, with half-hour episodes on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 12:55-13:25, until the last episode aired in September 1997. •
UTV dropped
A Country Practice in early September 1998. At that particular point, UTV had been airing episodes only once a week - on Mondays - at 2:45pm, in a 30-minute slot. UTV had reached episodes from early 1993, season 13.
Satellite and cable broadcasts • In the mid-1980s,
A Country Practice was a prime-time series on the pan-European satellite channel, "Sky Channel", twice weekly at 20:00, from April 1984, on Tuesday and Thursday. By August 1985, the series was being screened at 19:20 and 20:10, still on Tuesday and Thursday evenings, and in 1986, it was screened at 20:00 again. By January 1988, it was broadcast on Tuesday and Wednesday evening at 20:25. When the Sky Channel was re-launched on the new
Astra 1A satellite in February 1989, it became a UK-only service, and play-out facilities for Sky programmes were moved to the UK. Due to the ITV network having first-run rights to
A Country Practice in the UK, and Sky Channel having overtaken the point where ITV were in the storyline, they weren't able to premiere new episodes before ITV - therefore,
A Country Practice disappeared from the Sky schedule after four and a half years and was never resumed. For a brief period, later episodes were shown in 1997 on the cable channel
Carlton Select. Only the first 40 episodes have ever been repeated in the UK, in 1997, when ITV contractor,
Anglia Television, were the only region to repeat any episodes. Unlike other Australian soaps, which became cult viewing due to multiple runs;
Prisoner was broadcast twice, first on ITV, and then
Channel 5;
The Sullivans also had two full runs, once on ITV and repeated on
UK Gold; and also
Sons and Daughters, which had three runs, first on ITV, then UK Gold, and finally, Channel 5 –
A Country Practice has never been repeated in the UK or achieved the cult status of other soap operas of the same vintage.
European screenings France A Country Practice was named "À Coeur Ouvert". The series premiered on
FR3 in 1989.
Germany A Country Practice was named
Das Buschkrankenhaus (
The Country Hospital), and aired on
Sat 1 in 1985, and then on
ARD from 1989 to 1991.
Italy A Country Practice was named "Wandin Valley". Only 170 episodes were broadcast on local television stations in Italy, and the dub was made at TSI in Switzerland.
Ireland Episode one debuted on
RTÉ Two on Monday, 23 September 1985 at 18:15 airing weekdays. Start time later moved to 18:30. RTE split each episode in two to fill a 30-minute slot. On 3 October 1988, to make way for
Home and Away, RTE moved ACP to the main channel
RTÉ One, continuing weekdays at 17:30 in a 30-minute slot. The final episode (1088) aired on 13 February 1997. Between 1998 and 2002,
RTÉ rebroadcast seasons 8–10 (1988–1990). Episodes aired around midday and later moved to 09:30.
Norway A Country Practice (called "Hverdagsliv") was broadcast on TV2 from the channel's inception in 1992 to 2000.
Africa Kenya A Country Practice was also transmitted on Kenyan Television (VoK now KBC) during the 1980s.
Zimbabwe A Country Practice was broadcast on ZBC state television in the 1980s.
Oceania New Zealand A Country Practice was first transmitted on
TV2 on the afternoon of Thursday 13 February 1986. It was shown once a week on Thursdays at 2.30pm before moving to twice a week on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 6.30pm by 1987. By 1988, the series went back to once a week on Sundays at around 4pm, and by 1989 an additional episode was broadcast on Saturdays in the same timeslot. By 1990,
A Country Practice screened on Channel 2 on Saturdays and Sundays at 5pm until it moved to
TV One during the final months of 1991 replacing
Fair Go, where it was shown once a week on Tuesdays at 7.30pm until the end of 1992.
North America Canada The entire series was broadcast by
CBC Television outlet
CBET in
Windsor, Ontario. Two episodes were broadcast daily, Monday through Friday, starting in the late 1980s, until they were caught up to contemporary episodes in the early 1990s. Its inclusion on CBET's schedule was out of necessity to fill a television schedule: Windsor was located across from the much larger American city of
Detroit,
Michigan, and was thus considered part of that city's TV market. The CBC network's schedule had a number of American programmes that CBET could not show as Detroit stations had often held exclusive rights to broadcast them (for example, popular game shows
Wheel of Fortune and
Jeopardy! had their Detroit broadcasting rights held by
WDIV-TV). Many Australian soap operas,
A Country Practice among them, thus found loyal audiences in the Metro Detroit area, while they otherwise remain unknown in North America. From 1991 to 1994, the show also aired on
ASN, a cable network that served Canada's
Maritimes. Four hour-long episodes aired each week, from Monday to Thursday with Monday's and Tuesday's episodes repeated on Saturday and Wednesday's and Thursday's episodes on Sunday. The station aired the show from episode 1 to somewhere in the early 700s. ASN ceased carrying the show when specialty cable channel
Showcase was launched on 1 January 1995, as they picked up
A Country Practice for broadcast throughout Canada. It broadcast one episode daily, from Monday to Friday, and completed the entire series run (including the 30-episode Network Ten series) in June 1999. It began rebroadcasting the entire series on 28 June 1999, with promises that the entire series would be broadcast for those who missed the first airing. However, a single line of text scrolling across the bottom of the screen during 21 August 2000, episode announced that the show would be removed from the Showcase lineup as of Monday, 28 August 2000. According to the station's email autoresponse at the time, the decision was based on "declining viewership and a demand by viewers for more current programming". ==Novel==