Look One Way and Row Another
12th September 1999Each Tub Must Stand On It's Own Bottom
19th September 1999It Takes a Voyage to Learn
26th September 1999Dear, Dear Bread and Beer, if I Were Rich, I Wouldn't Be Here
3rd October 1999The Whole Kettle of Fish
10th October 1999In a Bit of a Tight
18th October 1999You Can't Look at the Sea Without Wishing for Wings
25th October 1999From Stem to Stern
1st November 1999Sailing Under False Colors
8th November 1999Ships That Pass In The Night
15th November 1999Red Sky at Morning, Sailor Take Warning
22nd November 1999Batten Down The Hatches
29th November 1999Don't Give Up the Ship
13th December 1999Twenty Sailors Around a Buttonhole
10th January 2000A Sailor Who's Lost His Leg Doesn't Miss His Boot
24th January 2000Everyone Must Row with the Oar He Has
14th February 2000Promises Made in a Storm Are Forgotten on a Calm Sea (1)
28th February 2000New Skies Call for New Duties (2)
6th March 2000A Rising Tide Takes All Boats
13th March 2000Never Burn Your Tongue on the Admiral's Broth
20th March 2000It Blew So Hard It Took Two Men to Hold One Man's Hair On
27th March 2000Abandon Ship
3rd April 2000Hope Island is an American television show that originally aired on PAX TV in the 1999-2000 season. It was based on Ballykissangel, a popular drama that aired on the BBC One. - Reverend Daniel Cooper arrives on Hope Island to reopen a church that has been abandoned for decades, hoping the quiet assignment will help him move past a personal tragedy. Met with skepticism from the island’s residents—especially innkeeper Alex Stone, who has long turned away from faith—Daniel struggles to find his place. With the help of Alex’s young son Dylan, a lonely boy who becomes his unexpected ally, Daniel begins restoring both the church and his own sense of purpose. As he earns the trust of the island’s quirky community, he must confront the past he tried to escape and discovers the possibility of healing, belonging, and new love. - The series ran for 22 episodes, and focused on the residents of Hope Island, a small island in the Pacific Northwest with a population of 1,998.
