Wood cured in water has interesting properties:
first, it removes the edible parts for bugs and fungi, as sugars and other yummy compounds are slowly extracted (like from a tea bag). So water-cured logs are much more resistant to decay. Since the wood structure is more porous after curing, the wood dries faster once sawn.
Second, it saturates the entire log with water, also the heart wood, which was drier than the sapwood. Slabs, boards and planks sawn from water-cured logs are dimensionally much more stable, have less warping and checking during drying, because there isn't any difference in moisture content across the wood.
Unfortunately, water-curing logs takes at least a year, preferentially even 2-3 years.