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1-14 of 14
- Intertwining tales of love, greed, and secret identities in Charles Dickens's 1860s London.
- When they learn of a secret covenant on the status of Hong Kong signed by Mao in 1944, Chinese factions, the British government, Hong Kong businessmen, AND the Mafia all try to be the first to take hold of it. Tough man Sean Dillon, pressured by Brigadier Ferguson into working for the British, does it his own way. But we see a new twinkle in his eye when he looks at sweet Su Yin... And can it be that pretty Inspector Hanna Bernstein is beginning to grow fond of Sean?
- One man's search for his kidnapped daughter causes his reality to unravel.
- Piecing together the final days of Miu, a colourful young man who moved to London from Hong Kong to become an Architect but lost his way.
- The Roadshow spreads out its picnic rug in the beautiful gardens of Powis castle in Wales.
- 1961–TV Episode
- By world standards, Australia's trout industry is a minnow. Production in Europe is around 400,000 tonnes while Australia would be lucky to push out a mere 2,000 tonnes. But importantly Australian trout is free of most of the diseases, which cause problems in Europe and, despite drought-related production difficulties, our trout industry is confident of a bright future.
- Many viewers would not be aware that this delicious nut is actually native to Australia although it was a group of farmers from Hawaii who first realised the potential of macadamias. But through a combination of circumstance and hard work, the macadamia industry was eventually re-established where it rightfully belongs, right here in Australia. And there is little doubt this would not have occurred had it not been for the foresight of one Craig Paton.
- Australians are reknowned for their inventiveness. The postage stamp, the photocopier, the ute, the black box flight recorder, the stump jump plough and the cochlear implant all sprang from the brains of clever Australians. Rural Australians are especially inventive, but getting city financiers to back them can often be so difficult that their ideas never see the light of day.
- When Christopher Columbus took chillies from the Americas to the world, it's a safe bet he would never have imagined they'd end up in the coastal ranges of southern New South Wales. But in fact, three enterprising men from Eden, on the far south coast, have started an organic chilli growing venture that is producing gourmet food and wine for an expanding market. Although tiny by world production standards, Disaster Bay Chillies recently won a swag of gold medals at the London Great Taste awards and the World Firey Foods festival in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
- In the past two decades farm tourism has grown in popularity and has provided many property owners with extra income. And a cluster of bed and breakfasts on the Queensland/New South Wales border have stumbled across one crop so beautiful and captivating the tourists cannot resist.
- It is supposed to be a way to lock in a price and a buyer. But signing a contract has locked a group of irrigators in southern New South Wales into a tight situation. They now face losses of hundreds of thousands of dollars if they are unable to deliver the corn they promised. Water cuts have left the irrigators high and dry and their customers increasingly impatient.