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In this episode of Old World Prep, we break down the real Viking rot-proofing system that kept longships seaworthy, tools intact, and structures standing in brutal northern climates. No myths. No reenactor fluff. This is the industrial-level pine tar and ash process used centuries before modern preservatives existed. You’ll learn how pine tar was actually made from resin-rich wood using controlled pyrolysis, why Vikings preferred roots and heartwood, and how ash dips chemically altered wood to kill decay before it started. We explain why tar works at the molecular level, how it blocks moisture and oxygen, and why flexibility mattered more than hardness for long-term survival. This isn’t just history. This method was still relevant during WWII when resources were scarce and reliability mattered more than convenience. Modern pressure-treated lumber leaches toxins and fails under stress. Viking tar flexes, seals, and lasts. If you build with wood, live off-grid, restore tools, work near water, or care about real self-reliance, this knowledge applies right now. We show how to use these methods today on fence posts, sheds, boats, tool handles, and ground-contact timber using techniques that haven’t changed because they don’t need to. This video is for serious history buffs, survivalists, experimental archaeologists, and builders who want methods that don’t rely on supply chains or chemicals. Forest. Fire. Time. Skill. If you value old knowledge that still works, subscribe to Old World Prep, share this video with someone who builds things that matter, and keep these methods alive by using them.