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Q&A

Sticks leaning on a tree building a hut-like formation - what's the purpose of that?

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We were in a central European forest last weekend and discovered a few places where a bunch of sticks were leaned against a tree. They build kind of a circle so that it looked like a small hut. However, this can't be the purpose of them, cause they weren't pretty close to each other (so they are holey and thus wouldn't serve as a roof).

I've made a little sketch (wasn't able to take a photo :/):

tree

There were quite a few of them. We've discovered at least three.

What's the purpose of such "buildings"?

Edit:

The room "covered" in those sticks was pretty small. So the shelter theory would only work for kids.

Edit:

As far as I can remember they were leaned against a pine. At least not against a fruit tree.

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3 answers

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Were there fruit trees nearby? I ask because here (South Germany) the old-style apple trees grow really big, and in autumn they have such masses of fruit that the branches can break off under the weight. So they keep those sticks leaning on the trees, and in autumn they get wedged under the long branches so they don't break.

The modern apple plantations for the mass market have short trees which don't have this problem. The really big trees are for cider apples - the older breeds are supposed to have more taste.

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This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/10616. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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These dot the woods near my house (Eastern United States), where children construct them as play forts. I suspect this activity has worldwide appeal.

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While that construction has no shelter currently, Scouts and other outdoors groups will often make a frame like you describe, and then cover those branches with leaves, moss or even a tarp in order to provide a shelter.

Using the tree trunk gives a solid support for this sort of thing, and often the tree itself provides some shelter from its own branches.

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