It’s to tie your horse when going into the saloon, obviously.
__KptnHaddock on
This is what we lean our Houses against, they’re structurally important.
blueskych on
Probably to protect the corners of the house where cars / any vehicles really go around.
trubicoid2 on
It’s ancient protection for the edges of buildings etc.
Ok_Performer50 on
So you don’t stub your toe at the edge.
bb1950328 on
From a time when more horse carriages were around. These things prevented the carriages from going around the edges too closely and catching on the wall or scratching it.
16 commenti
Make pissing more difficult.
Snow.
It’s to tie your horse when going into the saloon, obviously.
This is what we lean our Houses against, they’re structurally important.
Probably to protect the corners of the house where cars / any vehicles really go around.
It’s ancient protection for the edges of buildings etc.
So you don’t stub your toe at the edge.
From a time when more horse carriages were around. These things prevented the carriages from going around the edges too closely and catching on the wall or scratching it.
It’s an iron guard stone (Radabweiser). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guard_stone
It’s a test to see if you use your eyes, otherwise you trip and fall.
You can chain your kid while it plays on the garden
Old school horse carriage wheel bouncers both to protect the bbuildong and the wheels
Near a lake?
The symbol of Basel, do you don’t forget where you are
To tie your cow while you run some errands
All you need now is some delicious sausages and a grill…😝
😝