In Germany they used the geographical mile, which is defined as one fifteenth of a degree of latitude. This is four nautical miles exactly. The Danish mile was close to that, but not precisely the same.
@@WestGoesEast Hills? you went to Lolland :-)) the highest point on that Island is 30 meters (that's standard international meter :-)) above sealevel peace and love.
Ah that shelter is epic. I remember your post on that. Never seen anything like that before! Clever ol danes!
Until you sit up and bump ya head!
@@WestGoesEast Is there an app to locate those? I'm headed soon to Denmark. Thanks.
@@scooterdog64 udinaturen.dk/
You won't believe it but I'm from upper Austria too XD. And guess who's my neighbor 🤔
Johannus?
@@philrwesty Yes😀
That's so funny. What are the odds?
In Germany they used the geographical mile, which is defined as one fifteenth of a degree of latitude. This is four nautical miles exactly. The Danish mile was close to that, but not precisely the same.
Ah, that explains it. Thank you
Danish miles = about 7 km. Swedish miles = about 10 km
Hills?
@@WestGoesEast miles. You were wondering about the numbers on the mile stone. Not imperial miles, not US miles, not Swedish miles, but Danish miles.
@@WestGoesEast Hills? you went to Lolland :-)) the highest point on that Island is 30 meters (that's standard international meter :-)) above sealevel
peace and love.
@@ane-louisestampe7939 interesting!
I never knew that!