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This video breaks down why medieval wood preservation wasn’t primitive at all—and why it still outperforms many modern building systems today. Medieval builders didn’t try to make wood waterproof. They understood rot at a biological level. They worked with moisture instead of trapping it. They designed structures to dry, breathe, and survive. In this episode, we break down the real techniques medieval carpenters used to keep wood standing for centuries. Pine tar that penetrated deep into the grain instead of sealing the surface. Lime wash that turned fungi and insects into biological non-starters. Iron fasteners that strengthened wood through chemistry instead of weakening it. Design choices that prevented rot before it could start. You’ll learn why modern sealants often fail invisibly, how WWII accelerated the abandonment of long-term building logic, and why speed replaced durability in modern construction. This isn’t reenactment. This isn’t nostalgia. This is applied historical engineering. If you build, restore, homestead, or care about skills that survive supply chain collapse, this knowledge still matters. The past didn’t survive by accident. It survived because people built with time in mind. Subscribe to Old World Prep for real historical systems that still work. Share this with anyone who builds things meant to last longer than a warranty. The old world still has lessons we ignore at our own risk.