Until I
start to write a post I'm never sure just where it is going. Some days it is a
rant, some days more humorous, and occasionally it is a day for highlighting
the unusual, something that caught my attention in the media. This is one of
those latter days.
Today is
the story of Winston Howes, perhaps the most unusual farmer in Britain.
Personally
I have always been the type of person who likes to give flowers and tributes to
people while they are still around to enjoy them, rather than a grand oration
at a funeral or a ritual visit to a graveside every anniversary or whatever,
after they have passed.
But other
people think differently, and there's nothing wrong with that. Most do just
what I have said I don't, but Winston Howes, the farmer in Britain has taken it
a step farther than most.
Howes' wife
for some 33 years Janet died seventeen years ago and he felt he wanted to
create a lasting tribute to her memory. So, being a farmer, Howes set aside a
6-acre plot in his 112-acre farm near the town of Wickwar, and spent a week
planting six thousand oak saplings, leaving a perfectly heart-shaped clearing
in the middle. He also planted daffodils in the middle that bloom every spring.
The heart
measures about an acre in size and points to the childhood home of Howes’ wife.
It is bordered by a bushy hedge and is only accessible from a track leading to
the tip.
Despite
it's size it is a private tribute because unless you get an aerial view you
would never know it is there at all. Howes has flown over his farm to get the
full aerial effect, just like Collett (his late wife) he says, but mostly he
just retreats there to the secret meadow to sit and reflect.
So well done, Winston Howes.
Have a
look.
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