请调整浏览器窗口大小或者请使用手机查看!
The team attend the Great Yorkshire Show where Peter Wright is in the show ring with Highland bull Murphy and Rob and Dave Nicholson from Cannon Hall Farm call for help. Julian Norton and Lucy enjoy a day off work trying to win a cuddly toy prize.
Matt Smith rushes to save unborn twin calves, Peter Wright worries about a rabbit who has a potentially life-threatening maggot infestation, and Julian Norton operates on a French bulldog with breathing problems.
Matt Smith is called to Cannon Hall Farm, where their star show horse has suffered a nasty cut to her eyelid. Pip the parrot is something of a rebel who even terrifies his owner Danny, so, Peter Wright is very apprehensive about cutting its claws.
Shona Searson tackles an unusual emergency with a pregnant sheep who has pushed out her uterus before giving birth. Peter Wright performs surgery on an elderly German shepherd whose life is in danger because of an infected womb, and Julian Norton operates on a young girl's much-loved pet goat.
Rohin Aojula attempts to save a pregnant goat and her kid, and Peter Wright treats a working spaniel who suffered a toe injury on the moors. And Matt Smith visits some lively cows that need dehorning, providing him with a demanding workout.
When Julian Norton's beloved Jack Russell Emmy is sick, it gives him an idea. While he can use his vet skills to help her, he calls on his good friend, popular animal artist Lucy Pittaway, to immortalise Emmy on canvas. Peter Wright deals with a life-threatening emergency at the practice, when a pet goat called Fred is unable to urinate because of a blockage. Fearing Fred's bladder may already be ruptured, the team head into theatre to try and save him.
Julian Norton visits a farm on a historic estate in Leeds to help Unicorn, a goat with one horn. Then he has to take the bull by the horns and deal with their Shetland bull. Peter Wright operates on 11-year old Jack Russell Basil, who's the customers' favourite at his owner's hair salon. Basil has a serious-looking eye problem and, if Peter can perform successful surgery, there might just be a haircut in it for him!
Martin Paterson from the Huddersfield animal hospital heads into war-torn Ukraine, travelling over 1000 miles in an ambulance loaded with medical supplies. And while he's briefly switched to helping people, he also visits a homeless animal shelter to see the effects the war is having on the country's pets. Back in Thirsk, Julian Norton's treating a rescue dog called Woody, who has a worrying tumour in a very delicate spot, which might make it tricky to remove. Peter Wright heads to visit his old farmer friend's sheep, who has a huge lump on her jaw. Matt Smith's patient at a local college is a duck with penis problems - and amputation might the only option.
1970s fever hits Julian Norton's practice in Wetherby! But at Cannon Hall Farm, Dave Nicholson's worried about a different kind of fever. A mystery illness has struck down their prized Swiss Valais tup Albert, and Shona Searson is worried it could be serious. Peter Wright's patient is a grumpy goose called Jemima, who has a nasty-looking eye infection. And a worrying problem interrupts a happy retirement for former sheep farming team Steve and Stomp, as Rohin Aojula can see that old Collie Stomp needs life-saving surgery.
Julian Norton is called to help an elderly matriarchal alpaca, while Shona Searson's patient is a young male Shire horse called Dante, who needs surgery to calm him down. And Peter Wright's heart is melted by a nine-week old Cockapoo puppy with a deformed leg. Can he perform a successful operation to help him find a new home?
Can Peter Wright help a young farmer who's inherited her farm from her late father? She's having a taxing day, with her sheep struggling to give birth. Matt Smith's latest unusual patients are father and son otters at
the local zoo. Julian Norton operates on a much-loved Collie called Callie. When a rescue piglet has a badly torn ear, Rohin Aojula heads into the pig sanctuary in the woods. And it's even darker at the animal hospital in Huddersfield - all systems are down because of a power cut. But the vital surgeries have to continue, so how will the team cope?
The Yorkshire Vet returns to follow all the drama, laughter and tears as a group of town and country vets, at four different practices across the county, help animals of all kinds. Christopher Timothy, who once played the world's most famous vet, James Herriot, provides the series narration.
Peter Wright, who was trained in Thirsk by Herriot himself, has more than 40 years' experience treating all kinds of animals. After leaving Skeldale Veterinary Centre, his old boss's original practice, he now works out of Grace Lane Vets in Kirkbymoorside, on the edge of the moors in North Yorkshire. Meanwhile, Julian Norton, Peter's former partner at Skeldale, has opened a practice back in Thirsk, which he runs alongside his wife, Anne. Julian is also a partner at Sandbeck Veterinary Centre in Wetherby, just across Yorkshire.
Following in their footsteps in upholding the Herriot ethos are a team of young vets at the Donaldson's practice in West Yorkshire. They include Matt Smith, Shona Searson, David Melleney and Rohin Aojula. Although they are based at a state-of-the-art animal hospital in Huddersfield, Donaldson's is another traditional mixed practice – their work involves caring for farm animals, wildlife and popular pets as well as some that are more exotic. The vets also encounter all kinds of colourful characters, from children to kindly old ladies to larger-than-life, straight-talking farmers.
Yorkshire is the series' other leading character. As we follow the vets to more remote farm locations, the countryside provides a stunning, ever-changing backdrop. And whatever the weather, they continue the Herriot tradition – treating all creatures great and small.