Wattle & Daub

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  • Опубліковано 18 січ 2016
  • English wooden construction circa 1500. Short film cut from the BBC's Tudor Farm, Part 1
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 10

  • @RichardVobes
    @RichardVobes 5 років тому +3

    Love to build a house like this myself!

  • @NiemLythi-iv9cr
    @NiemLythi-iv9cr Місяць тому

    you are so wonderful

  • @wearenaturew.a.n6063
    @wearenaturew.a.n6063 2 роки тому +1

    Keep up the good work 🙏❤️

  • @PhantomQueenOne
    @PhantomQueenOne 8 років тому +5

    You could do the same with clay, slaked lime, hemp hurds/shive or chopped straw (hemp is better) and water to mix over the wattle. It was also used. And no stench. It just smells like earth. Although dung was sometimes added.The lime plaster was also used for the outside and inside walls. Straw or hemp hurds mixed with lime and clay for the daub and 'scratch coat', and then without for the smooth last coats. Hempcrete literally becomes stone-like. Still has to have lime plaster over the top of it though.
    Yes hemp was grown in the UK, as a matter of fact King Henry VIII ordered his subjects to grow it. www.ukcia.org/culture/history/hmpukhis.php
    Adobe is made about the same in the Southwestern US in 'brick' form without the wattle (sometimes with dung, sometimes not. And now concrete is added to make it stronger.), but most likely wouldn't stand up to the wet in the UK. I've stuccoed, but that is with concrete stucco mix not lime plaster.
    The Romans did use concrete in the UK as historical record states and it was better than modern concrete surprising enough, but I don't think it was used in the middle-ages.

    • @robertotarter7839
      @robertotarter7839 5 років тому +2

      @@NAT-rd8fl Water resistance, daub is water soluble, hardened lime it is not. Thry didn't cover the whole house tho, normally only the lower half and/or the northern side.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 5 років тому

      lime is now being "rediscovered" in England - the concrete gets moldy and does not flex with the wood frame of the building drying. So it cracks. Africa uses dung - it's a lot easier than burning wood as deforestation to make lime ash. So then special plant "lacquer" is used for waterproofing.

    • @j.c.h.3257
      @j.c.h.3257 4 роки тому

      Roman concrete as we know now, used volcanic ash, so I also don't think it was used in middle ages UK.

  • @ericaulbach
    @ericaulbach Рік тому

    Is hazel just short for hazelnut tree or is it different?

    • @elliotprice9421
      @elliotprice9421 Місяць тому

      Hazel is the tree thats produces hazelnuts (its seeds)

  • @chrisdowns8859
    @chrisdowns8859 14 днів тому

    Mud and straw does the same thing. No dung.