In 1990, Heiney took up traditional farming in
Westleton,
Suffolk where he lives with his wife
Libby Purves. The couple have a daughter. Their first child, Nicholas, died on 26 June 2006, aged 23; Nicholas hanged himself in the family home after suffering from a serious mental illness. A collection of his poems and sea-logs of a Pacific journey under
square rig, ''The Silence at the Song's End'', has been published, inspired a song cycle by
Joseph Phibbs, and was broadcast on Radio 4. For ten years Heiney worked with
Suffolk Punch horses. He wrote a diary of his activities for
The Times as well as several books. He also presented two videos about farming with horses,
Harnessed to the Plough and
First Steps to the Furrow. Heiney had agreed with his wife that they should have the farm for no more than ten years. After the farm's sale Heiney tried to make more time for his other great passion, sailing. He has also presented
A Victorian Summer for
Anglia Television, eight half-hour programmes about traditional farming: the glory of working the land with horses as well as the rigours and difficulties that Victorian farmers faced. In 2005 he took part, in the family boat, in the single-handed transatlantic OSTAR race, and wrote an account of the race's history and his own slow crossing in
The Last Man Across The Atlantic. == References ==