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For thousands of years, Korean farmers maintained soil fertility without chemical fertilizer, global supply chains, or industrial infrastructure. Their method was not primitive — it was a sophisticated biological system based on fermentation, microbial ecosystems, and complete nutrient cycling. This documentary explores the forgotten agricultural knowledge that sustained food production through invasions, dynastic collapse, famine cycles, and modern war. Long before synthetic nitrogen or phosphate mining reshaped global farming, Korean liquid fertilizer systems created self-renewing soil using only local resources. You will learn how traditional fermentation methods transformed organic material into highly bioavailable plant nutrients, why breathable onggi earthenware vessels became critical agricultural technology, and how decentralized fertility allowed farming to survive even when trade networks failed. The video also examines how modern Korean Natural Farming revived and systematized these ancient practices — and why industrial agriculture largely abandoned similar biological systems despite their proven resilience. This is not just agricultural history. It is a survival lesson. When fertilizer supply chains break, centralized systems fail. But biological fertility can rebuild itself anywhere life exists. If you want to understand resilient food production, regenerative agriculture, soil microbiology, wartime farming survival, and decentralized sustainability, this is essential viewing. Subscribe to The Survival Record for deep historical analysis of real survival systems — the knowledge that allowed societies to endure when stability disappeared.