Abode.
Hœnir is part of the Aesir.
Hœnir usually relied on Mimir. Hoenir ( Old Norse Hœnir, pronounced “HIGH-nir”) is an obscure Aesir god.

Hoenir is described as tall and handsome and has very long legs. There, Hœnir was indecisive and relied on Mímir for all of his decisions, grunting noncommital answers when Mímir was absent. The Völuspá, one of the poems in the Poetic Edda, has Hoenir playing a role in the creation of the first humans, Ask and Embla. Asgard. In Norse mythology, Hœnir is one of the Æsir. There, he appears in a triad comprised of himself, Odin, and Loðurr, a god about whom we know as little as we know about Hoenir. In Ynglinga saga, along with Mímir, he went to the Vanir as a hostage to seal a truce after the Æsir-Vanir War.

Honir was a simple-minded god and along with Mimir was sent to live with the Vanir. Hoenir was one of the hostages when The War finished, he along with Mimir left Asgard and went to Vanaheim. Hœnir is a warrior god in Norse mythology. He was briefly mentioned by Mimir. Mentions of Hoenir in Old Norse literature are highly confused and contradictory. He was also an original Aesir god himself.

Hœnir is the god … Hoenir comes back after Ragnarok, with Vanir magic, which he shares with the New Gods. He is the god of silence, spirituality, poetry, passion, battle frenzy, and sexual ecstasy Óðr. He is sometimes confused with Vili. Honir (in some version Hœnir) is the Norse Aesir god of indecision, avoidance and Mystery. There's texts in the Eddas and other old norse manuscrits suggesting that Hoenir and Vil are the same god. Hœnir and Mimir were hostages in a war between the Aesir and Vanir gods.