When Howard Howes lost his wife Janet in 1995, his world changed forever. She had died from heart failure at the age of 50, leaving behind their Gloucestershire farm and a lifetime of shared memories. In the months that followed, Howard searched for a way to honor her life in a manner as enduring as their love. What he created became one of the most touching tributes in Britain.
On a six-acre field beside his farmhouse, Howard planted thousands of oak saplings. But he left a clearing in the middle, carefully shaped like a heart. The design was intentional: the heart’s tip pointed directly toward Wotton Hill, Janet’s childhood home. “It was a flash of inspiration,” Howard explained years later. “Once it was completed, we put a seat in the field, overlooking the hill where she grew up.”
For more than a decade, the meadow remained a private secret, known only to Howard and a few close friends. He often visited the clearing, sitting quietly to think of Janet, especially in spring when daffodils bloomed inside the heart. “It is a lovely and lasting tribute,” he said. “Something that will be here long after I am gone.”
The secret was eventually revealed in the most unexpected way. In 2012, hot-air balloon enthusiast Andy Collett flew over the area and was astonished to see a perfect heart shape hidden in the forest. From the sky, the love story came alive, framed in green and gold. Collett photographed the meadow, and the images quickly touched people worldwide. Howard, who married Janet in 1962, said he sometimes still flies over the tribute himself. “You can’t see it from the ground. From the air, though, it’s incredible,” he shared. What began as grief turned into a lasting symbol of devotion. Howard’s heart meadow is not just a clearing among trees—it is proof that love can be planted, nurtured, and remembered for generations to come.