Janet and her husband had a large house near or on the
Royal Mile of Edinburgh, and the site was called Fowler's Close and later, Anchor Close. Janet, as a widow, let parts of this house for rent. In May 1578 a roof-slater William Robesoun was punished outside the house for slandering Eleanor Bowes, the wife of the English ambassador
Robert Bowes who was lodged there.
Esmé Stewart lodged in the house in 1579 when he first arrived from France and before his departure in 1583. In September 1584, she hosted a party of German tourists including
Lupold von Wedel who went riding with her son, the poet William Fowler. The
Earl of Huntly prepared a banquet for the king and others in the house in March 1589. Robert Bowes was lodged in the house in January 1592, and reported that it was being prepared for James VI and Anne of Denmark, who needed extra security because of the threat posed by the
Earl of Bothwell. In September 1593, Bowes' wife Eleanor organised a dinner at the lodging, serving venison in the English manner for the
Earl and Countess of Atholl, and they were joined by the
Earl and
Countess of Bothwell. In the early 1590s
Giacomo Castelvetro, an Italian writer who served James VI as a language tutor and secretary, lodged with them and Eleanor Bowes made friends with his wife, Isotta de Canonici, the widow of
Thomas Erastus. The court of Scottish exchequer met in the house in 1593. Janet and her elder son, the merchant William Fowler, litigated over her management of the building's fabric. In September 1594, the lairds of
Buccleuch and
Cessford stayed secretly in the house, to meet with the
Master of Glamis. ==Janet Fockart's inventory==