13 minute read

JENNIFER CORR

It’s almost the day of love, Valentine’s Day! It’s time to grab a card, some flowers, chocolate or whatever your significant other, or friend, would like to feel loved. But Valentine’s Day, or the week of, also makes for a great time to spend with your favorite person.

Here are some date ideas within all different price ranges:

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Valentine’s Day dinners and brunches: Glen Cove Mansion: Enjoy a four course dinner, complete with a cocktail hour, open bar and entertainment for $110 a person. Dinner goes from 6 to 10 p.m. on Feb. 14. Buy tickets at themansionatglencove.com/.

The Milleridge Inn: Join the Milleridge Inn in Jericho for a romantic brunch. Enjoy all you can eat prime rib, crab legs, shrimp and more. This event is on Sunday, Feb. 12 from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Brunch is $65.95 for adults ($75.95 for bottomless mimosas) and $39.95 for children. Visit the milleridgeinn.com for tickets.

The Red Salt Room: Enjoy a Prix-fixe menu by legendary chef David Burke at the Red Salt Room at the Garden City Hotel on Feb. 14 from 5 to 9 p.m. for $135. To see the menu and learn how to get tickets, visit gardencityhotel.com/redsalt-room. There will also be a brunch on Feb. 12.

Oheka Castle Hotel & Estate: Have dinner in a castle with this prix-fixe menu at Oheka Castle in Huntington. Seating is from 4 to 8:30 p.m. on Feb. 14, and is $175 a person. To see the menu and reserve a table, visit oheka.com/upcoming-events. htm. There will also be a brunch the prior weekend.

Valentine’s Day scares: Bayville Scream Park: Go for a very untraditional Valentine’s Day date and head over to Bayville Scream Park, otherwise called Bayville Adventure Park, on Feb. 10, 11 and 14 for three Valentine’s-Day themed haunted houses and three themed bars, as well as a three-course dinner. Deals range from $29.75 to $79.75. Visit bayvillescreampark.com for tickets and more information.

Cooking and art classes: What’s Cooking?: Book a private cooking class for $175 with What’s Cooking? in Oyster Bay. Learn how to make steam, shrimp, fish and vegetarian tacos as well as guacamole, vegetarian slaw and super festive toppings. Reserve on whatscookingny.com.

The Well Seasoned Chef: Learn how to make creamy organic tomato soup, pan seared steak with horseradish sauce, garlicky stir fried brussels sprouts, rosemary-Parmesan roasted potatoes and chocolate covered strawberries with homemade ice cream at The Well Seasoned Chef on Feb. 13. The class is $120 and it books fast, so reserve your spot at thewellseasonedchef.com.

ClayNation: Paint and sip in a tranquil, creative alternative to a bar scene at ClayNation in Glen Cove. There is a variety of art projects to choose from and you will never get bored. ClayNation provides everything needed to complete your art project, so feel free to bring your own snacks and drinks. There is an $8 studio fee, plus the cost of your project. This class is on Feb. 10 from 6 to 10 p.m. Sign up at claynationonline.com.

Pottery on Wheels: This studio in West Islip offers pottery wheel classes for adults. For an hour, adults, who are beginners at pottery, will have the opportunity to work on the pottery wheel or hand-building tables with close instruction. Participants will choose two of their pieces to be fired, glazed and ready to be picked up about 3 to 4 weeks later. The class is $65. Sign up at potteryonwheelsny.com.

The Art Guild: Learn from artist Steven Vando at the Art Guild in Manhasset from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Feb. 16 and create “Experimental Florals in Loose and SemiAbstract Watercolors.” This class is $75 for non-members and $60 for members. Sign up at theartguild.org.

Pinot’s Palette: Get creative at Pinot’s Palette, a paint-and-sip studio, in East Meadow on any day, including Valentine’s Day. On Feb. 14, there will be classes “Love In The Horizon” and Blossoming Moonlight Love.” Sign up for these $46 classes at pinotspalette.com/eastmeadow.

Wine and beer tastings: Garvies Point Brewery & Restaurant: At this brewery in Glen Cove, enjoy one of Garvies Point Brewery’s flights right from the brewery with any appetizer for $20. For more information, visit garviespointbreweryandrestaurant.com.

Lithology Brewing Co.: At this brewery in Farmingdale, get your first flight for $13. For more information visit lithologybrewing.com.

W A Meadwerks: Taste various craft honey wines here in Lindenhurst. There are $12 flights, $3 samples and $8 glasses. Visit wameadwerks.com for more information.

Spa Day:

Glen Cove Mansion: The newly opened MYW Studios Mansion Spa is designed for your enjoyment and relaxation. Services including massages, facials, body scrubs and wraps, treatments, and even a salt cave. Day passes for guests start at $20 and for non-guests $45 and include fitness center, indoor pool, hot tub, sauna and steam room. To reserve, visit themansionatglencove.com.

East Wind Long Island: Spa packages at this hotel in Wading River start at $569 per couple. The starting package includes luxury overnight accommodations, $70 voucher towards dinner, champagne and chocolate strawberries and a hot stone massage or hydro-lifting facial per person at The Spa & Salon.

The Rockaway Hotel and Spa: Enjoy the Winter Pool House at The Rockaway Hotel and Spa in Queens. Included in the day pass, which starts at $30, there is access to the pool house, the sauna, lounge space and outdoor heated pool as well as towels and robes to use. There are other spa services at the hotel as well. Book online at therockawayhotel.com.

Winter Hikes (Free!): Garvies Point Preserve: Five miles of marked nature trails in Glen Cove.

Muttontown Preserve: Five hundred and fifty acres of fields, woodlands, ponds and estate grounds in East Norwich.

Cold Spring Harbor State Park: Forty acres of hilly terrain that offer scenic vistas of the Cold Spring Harbor.

Norman J. Levy Park and Preserve: The preserve’s highest point of 155-feet produces tremendous views of the Jones Beach Tower, the New York City skyline, and numerous coastal treasures. It’s located in Merrick.

Mill Pond Park: This long and narrow 54-acre preserve, located in Wantagh, includes a large pond that draws numerous native waterfowl, along with nature trails that wind through a wet woodland with red maple, coast pepperbush and skunk cabbage.

Caumsett State Historic Park Preserve: Caumsett State Historic Park Preserve, situated on a scenic peninsula extending into Long Island Sound in Huntington, offers miles of bridle paths, walking, jogging, hiking, biking, cross-country skiing and nature trails over acres of woodland, meadows, rock shoreline and salt marsh.

Word Find

This

HOROSCOPES By Holiday Mathis

Horoscopes

Holiday Mathis

International Word Find

INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND HOROSCOPES By

By Holiday Mathis

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’d love it if you didn’t need attention from others and were only doing what you do to ful ll your own curiosity and passion. Alas, attention is a basic human need. It’s woven into the fabric of humanity, and however ne or coarse the thread may be, there’s no shame in it. It’s part of the human connection.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). People decide how to interact based on the limited information they know of you at any given moment. Your self-knowledge is deeper but still incomplete. is is the value in long relationships with people who have experienced you in many scenarios. is week, you’ll bene t from seasoned insights.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Just when you think you’re working in isolation, or having an experience all your own, things shift. You’ll understand that you’re operating in a shared world, a co-creation. All that happens is a function of the group. Although there are more or less in uential people present, no individual is in control of the outcome.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). When the job places demands on your skill, grace and creativity, you feel happier for it. It’s when the job taps on your patience or acting ability that you feel the burden of work. It will still build and improve you, as long as you take it in small doses, lifting intentionally and methodically like a weightlifter in training.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). ere are those who are happy to see you explore, have adventures and learn what you’re good at. ey’ll celebrate you when you do well, and you won’t ever have to worry about them being jealous or trying to keep you in a certain role. is is what real love is. Soak it in.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). While learning involves duplication, it’s not all there is to it. You’re not a robot following a program; you’re an organism who learns through your senses and experience. You can’t learn in an environment that won’t let you take risks and make mistakes. Success will be a function of choosing your “classroom” well.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). What attention do you owe people in your life, your community and the world at large? How much can you give and still have plenty left for what matters to you? You’d rather tend to small, lovely things than let big, impersonal entities grab your focus. With intentionality, quiet and mindfulness, you’ll make it happen.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). While you can never pay certain people back for all they’ve done to make your life better, your respect makes a di erence. You’ll model this for those too immature to understand the reasons and ways our forebears sacri ced for our daily world to run smoothly. You pay homage in both playful and solemn ways.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You have a foggy fantasy about how a project will go and what it will entail. You’re about to nd out. Give yourself credit for having the rare courage to jump in and nd out what it’s really like. Even if the reality doesn’t quite live up to the dream, the vividness of experience is still the preference of the brave.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Clear-headed action is seldom associated with the storms of passion. In poetry, drama and song, too much romantic fervor often signi es doom. You’ll wonder if you’re too crazy about something or someone to make the right moves. Even the slightest detachment gives the bene t of healthy perspective.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Must it always be work before play? e animals are doing play rst, just as you did when you were small. It’s the natural way, and you never want to lose the ability of being excellent at the games that make existence sparkle. So you’ll practice and prioritize your fun -- an ordering of life you won’t be sorry for.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). ere will be exaggerations and overreactions to contend with this week and the equivalent of children crying for ice cream, infusing urgent emotion into nonessentials. You’ll acknowledge the emotions of others without taking them on as your responsibility and your days are made peaceful.

THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS ere was a time in your life when you thought peace was the opposite of an exciting life, but now you understand the fullness of experience that can happen from a foundation of deep peace. Feeling satis ed, connected and c alm allows you to go into the wilderness of life and creativity and have vividly felt adventures. You continue to resolve problems and settle into a serenity from which lovely relationships and projects will blossom. It will be among your top years.

COPYRIGHT 2023 CREATORS.COM alternative theme of the puzzle.

All that glitters

Solution: 22 Letters

Word Find

This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 22 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.

All

Solution: 22

FROM KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, 300 W. 57th STREET, 41st FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10019

Solution: Baubles bangles and beads

CUSTOMER SERVICE: (800) 708-7311 EXT. 236

CONTRACT BRIDGE — BY STEVE BECKER FOR RELEASE WEDNESDAY, FEB. 8, 2023

Date: 2/8/23

Contract Bridge

737 3rd Street Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 info@creators.com

By Steve Becker

Big swing on a small deal

South dealer. Both sides vulnerable.

Declarer then collected the rest of the tricks. He cashed the A-K of trump and the K-J of clubs, then crossed to dummy with a trump and discarded both his hearts on the A-Q of clubs to finish with 10 tricks and a score of 170 points.

At the second table, the defense functioned far more efficiently. Here East played the deuce of diamonds on the king to discourage West from continuing the suit, so West shifted to the jack of hearts at trick two.

East cashed the A-Q of hearts and reverted to diamonds by returning the nine. West won with the jack, cashed the ace and continued with the seven. When dummy ruffed with the nine, East overruffed with the queen.

Opening lead — king of diamonds.

Consider this deal from a teamof-four match. Only a partscore was involved, but even so, the hand is highly instructive.

At the first table, West led the diamond king, East signaling with the nine to indicate a doubleton. West continued with the ace and another diamond, which East ruffed. East could now have saved a trick by cashing the ace of hearts, but instead he returned a trump.

Then — as if declarer had not already suffered enough — East heartlessly returned a heart, promoting West’s jack of spades into another trump trick.

So, the declarer at this table went down two — 200 points — which was four tricks and 370 points worse than his counterpart had done at the first table. It was not that South had done anything wrong — he didn’t. It was simply that his opponents did everything right.

Tomorrow: A futile gesture.

Weekly Sudoku Puzzle

Enter digits from 1 to 9 into the blank spaces. Every row must contain one of each digit. So must every column, as must every 3x3 square. Answer to last issue’s Crossword Puzzle

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Pro Piano Man

Zenona de la Pena

Zenona de la Pena, Congregant of the Russian Orthodox Church, formerly of Sea Cliff died on Jan. 26 at age 94. Beloved wife of the late George; loving mother of Nick (Lori), George (the late Rebecca), Nonna Haughton (Michael) & Julian (Kathleen); adored grandmother of nine and great grandmother of one. De la Pena was an accomplished pianist at the Mozart Conservatory in Germany. In New York City she played for the Ballet Russes, and the Ballet Theatre. Zenona was also an accompanist for Rudolf Nureyev, Natalia Makarova, Margot Fonteyn and Lupe Serrano, and danced with the highly regarded Royal Ballet. De la Pena’s service was at the Russian Orthodox Church of the Assumption. Interment St. Vladamir’s Cemetery in Jackson, NJ.

Mary “Mae” Kita

Mary “Mae” Kita (nee Krul) passed away peacefully on Jan. 22. A long time resident of Bayville, Mary is survived by her loving husband Richard; her children

Maryanne Bates (Tom), Charles (Jeanne-Marie), and Diane Turner (late George); her grandchildren Emily, Catherine, Michael, Matthew and Kristen. To many she was “Mary the bus driver” as she drove for Locust Valley Central School District for over 20 years. She was a lifelong parishioner of the Church of St. Hyacinth as well as a member of the Ladies Auxillary of the Robert Spitell Ameerican Legion Post1285. Visitation was held at the McLaughlin Kramer Megiel Funeral Home. Mass was held at the Church of St. Hyacinth in Glen Head. Interment Locust Valley Cemetery.

Frances Bridget Regan

Frances Bridget Regan of Glen Cove died on Jan. 21 at age 78. Beloved wife of the late Martin; loving mother of Séamus (Tatjana), Sheelagh, Sinéad (John); dear sister of Una (Robin); also survived by loving nieces Clodagh, Dara, Nuala and nephew Jamie.

Frances adored her two favorite Golden Retrievers, Fenway and Bates. Frances was an artist, lover of literature and poetry. She loved to garden and spending time at the beach Ar dheis Dé go raibh a hanam dílis. Visitation was held at Dodge-Thomas Funeral Home, Glen Cove. Mass of Christian Burial was held at St. Boniface Martyr Church. Interment followed at Locust Valley Cemetery.

Joan Callaghan

Joan Callaghan of Glen Cove died on Jan. 20 at age 84. Beloved wife of the late John; loving mother of Therese Brignoni, John, Joanne Fitzgibbon and Kathy Manetta; dear sister of Joseph Hall and the late Gerard Hall; adored grandmother of nine and great-grandmother of five. Visitation was held at Dodge-Thomas Funeral Home. Mass of Christian Burial was held at St. Rocco RC Church. Interment followed at Maple Grove Cemetery.

Anna Gioino

Anna Gioino of Glen Cove died on Jan. 17 at age 86. Beloved wife of Carmine; loving mother of Roseann

(John Meehan), John (Jennifer) and Joseph; dear sister of Tony Antenucci; cherished grandmother of Melissa, Jonathan, Patrick and Caroline; also survived by many loving nieces and nephews. Gioino was a longtime member of the Sons of Italy. Gioino loved to cook, loved puzzles and was an avid reader. Visitation was held at the Dodge-Thomas Funeral Home. Mass of Christian Burial was held at St. Hyacinth RC Church.

Georgene Grella

Anton Media Group celebrates the lives of all those publish obituaries of residents and former residents families as a courtesy. We do this within the shortest according to space availability. Email no more than antonmediagroup.com, or mail to 132 E. Second St.,

Georgene Grella of Glen Cove died on Jan. 21 at age 67. Survived by her Loving husband, son, and family. Visitation was held at Dodge-Thomas Funeral Home. Funeral Service was held at the Holy Resurrection Greek Orthodox Church. Interment was held at East Hillside Cemetery.

Anton Media Group celebrates the lives of all those in the community. We publish obituaries of residents and former residents at no charge to the families as a courtesy. We do this within the shortest time frame possible according to space availability. Email no more than 100 words to obits@antonmediagroup.com, or mail to 132 E. Second St., Mineola, NY 11501.

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