kyphysics said:
Question - why don't these things get soaked in the rain water and get damaged ...and fall over? Is the wood really that sturdy?
A forester or someone else who really studies wood could probably give you a technical answer; but here are my simple thoughts:
1) Some amount of water is natural to wood & trees. Trees are built to siphon water from roots up to the very top of the tree via the outermost, living layer of wood. Milled wood usually retains some amount of moisture depending on local climate; for example, if a piece of furniture is built in a shop with a fairly normal temperate humidity of, say, 40 percent, and is then moved to a house in a very arid climate, gaps in joints etc. will likely start showing up. Anyway, the point is water is not a foreign substance to wood, whether living or harvested.
2) Excess water can of course damage milled wood
. . . but in my experience (handyman level), this shows up mostly as deterioration if unprotected wood has been allowed to stay soaked and/or in contact with the ground for too long a time and is starting to rot. That's why they make treated lumber for outdoor use. Whereas when considering an exposed frame erected for a house, and getting rained on, there's no reason to think you'd see drooping, bellying, or "falling over" in the 2x4s and 2x6s used for framing. Fibers in wood are pretty tough; and of course a skeleton frame has very little load on it.
Plus consider that boats have traditionally been built of wood; as well as floating docks and piers etc.; and there too the concern isn't the deformation of the structure when exposed to water, so much as the long-term potential for rot or weathering if not protected to some extent by paint, oil, chemical treatments, belonging to naturally resistant species, etc.
Here's a decent mid-level article on wood's structure and its usefulness as a construction material:
http://www.explainthatstuff.com/wood.html
And this PDF, if you read a ways, explains that wood isn't damaged so much by getting wet as by rotting and weathering; rot can come from fungus and weathering from repeated cycles of wetness and dryness. So again, just a few days or even weeks of rain by itself isn't a big concern for framing:
http://www.lsuagcenter.com/NR/rdonl...248E54EB4E83/51180/pub2703WoodDecayLowRes.pdf