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#BlackLocust#ForgottenKnowledge#SustainableFuture This is the wood they didn’t want you to remember. A tree so durable it outlives concrete. So rot-proof it laughs at pressure-treated lumber. So independent it threatened an entire industry built on replacement, chemicals, and planned decay. Fence posts driven into the ground over 100 years ago are still standing today—no poison, no maintenance, no marketing hype. While modern lumber rots on schedule, this wood quietly refuses to fail… and even heals the soil around it while it waits. In this video, you’ll discover: – The forgotten timber that held early America together – Why Black Locust ships survived cannon fire when others shattered – How a single tree can fix nitrogen, rebuild dead soil, and grow usable lumber without fertilizer or irrigation – Why you can’t find this wood at big-box stores—and who benefits from that – How planned obsolescence replaced permanence, and what it cost us This isn’t nostalgia. It’s a warning. When supply chains crack. When chemicals run out. When treated lumber spikes in price and still rots… The rot-proof timber will still be there. Growing. Waiting. Indifferent to profit models. Black Locust didn’t disappear because it was weak. It disappeared because it worked too well. If this video flipped a switch for you—if you felt that moment of recognition—don’t scroll past it. Subscribe to Everyday Harvest and hit the bell. Not for a channel. For the knowledge. Every subscription is a refusal to forget. Every share is a fence post driven into public memory. They buried this wood once. Let’s not help them do it again. #blacklocust#blacklocustwood#rotproofwood#woodthatdoesntrot#forgottenbuildingmaterials#ancientbuildingtechniques#sustainablebuilding#naturallumber#pressuretreatedlumber#whylumberrots#plannedobsolescence#hiddenhistory#lostknowledge #woodvsconcrete #homesteading#permaculture #regenerativeagriculture #nitrogenfixingtrees#fencepoststhatlast100years#historicalconstruction#nativeamericantechnology#selfsufficientliving#offgridbuilding#ecofriendlymaterials#climateresilientcrops#futureoffarming#woodindustryexposed #everydayharvest