About
LostPine.com
After decades of
abundance, pine forests are now planted and managed like farms.
Although pine continues to be a principle building material of
choice, the great pines have been relegated to our national parks for
viewing and their protection. As a nation, our beliefs are
not unlike the great pines. Although they are the foundation, the
principal building material behind actions, words, relationships, and
the legacy we pass to our children, beliefs are no longer popular to
discuss. Like the great pines, beliefs are relegated to occasional
viewing one hour on Sunday.
At
Lost Pine,
we discuss these things. We believe it is important to act
justly in all we do, to have a capacity for love and mercy for all those
in need and to walk humbly with our God.
This web site has been dedicated to our interests and beliefs.
When pioneers first
came to this country, the pine was the monarch of the forests. White
pines with trunks six feet in diameter, soaring to a height of 250 feet,
were easily found. In those days of trailblazing, exploration and
majestic sailing ships, the long, straight trunks of white pine were the
preferred choice for ship's masts. The whitish resin which seeps
out of the wounds of the pine tree was mixed with beeswax to seal the
seams of canoes. Cities
were built upon the timbers of the pines.
