Every day, residents of Frankfurt, Germany, watch a horse named Jenny strolling the streets by herself. Jenny is not hopeless.
The lovely Arabian mare is only retracing her owner’s footsteps. Jenny’s owner, Anna Weischedel, had grown too old to ride her,
so Jenny has been wandering about town by herself for almost a decade, stopping traffic and greeting locals as she goes.
Jenny wears a halter with a piece of paper that says, ‘My name is Jenny.’ This is done to ensure that no one is

concerned about a lone horse wandering in a busy city. I’m not running; I’m simply strolling. Thank you a lot.’
The letter hasn’t always kept people from phoning the cops out of concern for the horse, but officers are fully aware of Jenny and assure them that they shouldn’t be concerned.
Jenny, according to Anna, has brought much-needed joy to people’s lives during the coronavirus pandemic, according to a TRT World piece from last year.
Now that they have more time, people seem to notice her more, Anna said. Many onlookers touched her; perhaps they were missing some human interaction.

Around 4:00 pm, Jenny’s daily stroll comes to an end when Werner, Anna’s 80-year-old husband, boards
his e-scooter and searches the city for her. When he does, he merely tells her that she should go back to her house.
Werner, a former proprietor of a flower business, said that after that, ‘she slowly heads back.’