A questioner said:
Found in a old house. It is 10 Inches wide 5 ½ inches tall. It is heavy and fills like it is made for cement. Any idea?
Some of the answers were:
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It looks sooooo much like some crazy sea urchin skeleton, but its probably just aquarium decoration, made to look like one.
My guess is its a hide for fish and stuff and goes into an aquarium.
- Do not put this in an aquarium. There is no telling what it is made of and it could leach chemicals into the water disrupting the pH of the water or worse. Aquarium decorations are mostly plastic.
- My first thought also until I saw the size.Seems a bit big for a regular aquarium, plus no dried algae on it. Maybe a planter or more for a pond, just never used.
- It looks like a hanging pot to grow herbs in…
- This looks nothing like an urchin or a fish hide. Y’all need to stop upvoting random guesses.
- Very good guess, this looks like a fish cave to me, too. And while it superficially does resemble some oddly-shaped sea urchin core, it can’t really be that, because sea urchins are ‘5-sided’ while this has ‘3 sides’.
- Isn’t this a planter, the kind that used to have styrofoam in the bottom for fake plants?
- I don’t know what it is SUPPOSED to be for, but back in the 1970’s my mom planted strawberries in one of these. Dirt in the bottom, berry plants in the three holes, and the center hole was for watering so you didn’t get the water directly on the fruits.
- Made for cement or of?If it’s made of porous concrete/cement I think it could have been designed as a planter. Who knows what the user may have done with it.
- Umbrella stand
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Thinking hanging planter, ceramic
- It’s a decorative planter!! My mom had a few for the deck! Don’t know why they’re a three-holed shape, but THAT is a planter.
- Looks like a chicken drinking bowl. I don’t know the english name. Edit: found a video of a diy one. In Hungary we call them “csirke itató” Chicken drinker
- I know thos one!It is a planter for spices like oneis baslica, one for oregano, one for thyme. Just add some soil in the bottom.
I have one at home 🙂
- I think it is the weight that was inside of a patio umbrella stand base.
- Reminds me of the food bowl for my chickens and ducks.
- I’d use it as a hanging planter.Put a rope through the top and then tie a knot in it.
- Looks like a yarn bowl
- To me it looks like a chicken feeder. You’d put water or grains in it and the chickens would eat from it through the openings.It might be a sea urchin skeleton, as someone else suggested, but it looks pretty similar to a chicken feeder tray nonetheless.
- It could be a rope maker? 3 separate rope twisted into one.
- mostlikely a chicken feeder
- Planter for succulents.
- It’s for knitting. It holds a ball of yarn which is strung through the hole. Keeps the ball from running away as you’re knitting. It’s called a knitting bowl and they come in all shapes and sizes.
- It’s for birds (or chicken really). You put water inside and a bottle (normally glass) full of water upside down in the little hole in the middle. Normally there’s a metal structure to support the bottle. It keeps the water full as longs as the bottle has water.
- I’d say it was for rope making. A cord is threaded up through the center, and outer cords are dispensed from the three wider openings as they are braided around the central cord.
What do you think? Let us know in the comment!
In the attic of an old house, tucked away amidst forgotten relics and dust-coated memories, lies a peculiar object, awaiting discovery. Measuring a modest 10 inches in width and 5 ½ inches in height, this enigmatic item commands attention with its imposing weight, akin to that of solid cement. What secrets does it hold? What tales does it whisper from the shadows of antiquity?
Every creak of the floorboards, every gust of wind through the timeworn windows seems to herald its presence, begging for attention that has long been denied. And now, as curious hands lift it from its resting place, the mystery begins to unravel.
The object itself is a testament to craftsmanship, its surface weathered by the passage of time yet retaining an undeniable allure. Its weight suggests durability, a steadfastness that has weathered decades of neglect. But what, one might wonder, could warrant such sturdiness in a domestic item?
Examining it closely, one notices intricate details etched into its surface, reminiscent of a bygone era when artisans infused their creations with a sense of artistry and purpose. Could it have been a part of a larger structure, a cornerstone in a forgotten architectural marvel?
Speculation runs rampant as the mind races to assign meaning to this tangible piece of history. Was it a decorative element adorning the grand fireplace of a Victorian parlor, or perhaps a functional component of an industrial-age machinery? The possibilities are as vast as the expanse of time itself.
Yet, as intriguing as these conjectures may be, the truth behind this enigma remains elusive. Its origins shrouded in the mists of time, its purpose lost to the annals of history, it serves as a reminder of the transient nature of human existence.
But perhaps therein lies its beauty—the allure of the unknown, the thrill of exploration, the satisfaction of unraveling the mysteries of the past. For in the end, it is not the answers we seek, but the journey itself—the journey into the heart of the unknown, where every discovery is a triumph, every revelation a testament to the human spirit.
And so, as this artifact finds itself once more nestled among the relics of yesteryear, it invites us to ponder the mysteries that lie within the walls of every old house, waiting to be discovered by those bold enough to seek them out. For in the quiet corners of forgotten attics and dusty basements, the echoes of history linger, waiting to be heard once more.