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LIVE THE DREAM

BUSY BEE ORGANICS MEAL DELIVERY DISCOUNT

use the discount code liberty harborto get 10 off your next purchase from busy bee organics 1 1

***Special Offer: Use the discount code LIBERTY HARBOR for 10% OFF your next order.
Busy Bee Organics is a meal delivery service in Jersey City dedicated to creating and preparing healthy dishes for local consumers. They believe in high quality nutrition, with a focus on organic and locally sourced produce. Using food from local farms keeps their meals healthy as produce starts to loose nutrition once plucked from its life source. Local farmers also use minimal to 0 pesticides during the growing period. Busy Bee Organics offers plant-based options as well as meals with grass-fed beef, chicken, eggs and sustainable fish. Visit their site to see this week’s menu and to order your meals with our Liberty Harbor discount code!

9 GREAT JERSEY CITY DATE NIGHTS

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9 GREAT JERSEY CITY DATE NIGHTS

It’s a great time of year to get cozy with someone special. The stress of the holidays is over and the year is full of possibilities. Enjoy the best of Jersey City with these great ideas for memorable date nights.

MUSICAL DATE NIGHTS

Sometimes the perfect evening begins by hearing some great music. With so much to choose from in Jersey City, you don’t need to make plans far in advance. Try one of these options out this month.

  1. Winter Concert – What could be more romantic than listening to a live orchestra play selections from Tchaikovsky and Grieg? Pegasus at Mana: Orchestra Series will have a winter concert on January 27 from 7PM – 9PM. Enjoy two conductors as they present traditional and unusual arrangements for strings and piano.
  2. Jazz and Blues – Moore’s Lounge aka Bill and Ruth’s is famous for showcasing some of the best jazz artists around. Come hear talented artists like Vanessa Rubin on January 21 or lose yourself in a Friday night jam session.
  3. Live Music at Fox & Crow – Offering more than great pub fare, Fox & Crow has live music throughout winter to keep you and your date warm. Hear everything from the exotic to the contemporary in an inviting, cool atmosphere.

UNIQUE EATS

Exploring new restaurants or different types of cuisine together is the spice of life. Choosing something outside your tried and true standbys can be a mini gastro-adventure.

  1. Satis Bistro – If you’re looking for romance and a menu that will transport you to Europe, bring your date to Satis Bistro. Whatever time of day, you’ll love the intimate setting as well as their wine list.
  2. The Cliff – Here’s a perfect spot for brunch or lunch with your best guy or gal. Known for their “killer coffee,” you can refuel and recharge with selections like Huevos Rancheros or housemade granola.
  3. Harry’s Daughter – Warm up your date nights at Harry’s Daughter, specializing in Caribbean fare. The menu has been described as simple, versatile and delicious. Try it out for dinner, brunch or a late-afternoon snack.

FUN JUST FOR TWO

Finally, sometimes you just need to get out and do something really different. If you and your date love to laugh and try new adventures, consider these ideas:

  1. Paint and Sip – Refresh your creative side with Art Mango’s BYOB Paint and Sip classes. Check out the schedule of events and enjoy an evening for two while creating a work of art.
  2. Ballroom Dancing – Bring your relationship to a new level with dance lessons. You just might surprise yourself or your loved one with the experience of learning to dance. Choose from various types of ballroom dances depending on your interest and skill.
  3. Go Karting – And now for something completely different! Maybe you and your date are in the mood for speed and adventure. Sign up for racing lessons and learn a whole new side about your partner. Or enjoy the arcade, billiards or the race simulator. Either way, you’ll have a blast.

IT’S ALL ABOUT YOU

When it comes to date night, each couple has unique tastes and opinions. The best thing you can do is mix it up so things don’t get boring. While the weather’s cold, you can enjoy each other’s company at a new-to-you Jersey City spot.

MEET DARIUS, OUR BEE KEEPER AT LIBERTY HARBOR

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Did you know Darius, our Bee Whisperer who installed and maintains our hives got a shout out from JC Magazine? Congratulations Darius and Oh Honey Apiaries, we think you’re great! Read about his ventures HERE (or preview the content copied and pasted from below JCM article. Property of Hudson Reporter and Jersey City Magaine):

ON THE JOB WITH  OH HONEY
FOR JC BEEKEEPERS, LIFE IS BUSY BUT SWEET

BY TARA RYAZANSKY
PHOTOS BY MAX RYAZANSKY

Nov 22, 2017

Read more: Hudson Reporter – ON THE JOB WITH Oh Honey For JC beekeepers life is busy but sweet

Tine Pahl starts her day like she always does: by stirring honey into her morning coffee in place of sugar. “I use honey for everything,” Pahl says as she pulls out a mason jar full of homemade granola, sweetened with honey, of course. “I use it a lot for baking. I’m always finding new recipes.”

Pahl has more honey than she could ever use because she and her husband, Darius Plavinskas, run a beekeeping venture called Oh Honey. The couple balances beekeeping with raising a 10-year-old. Pahl is a psychoanalyst with a private practice in Manhattan, as well as a research scientist, while Plavinskas has a construction business in Manhattan and works as a visual artist.

Their beautiful home in Jersey City Heights is full of unique features like reclaimed cathedral windows and custom concrete countertops, but the most interesting feature of all has to be the stacks of colorful hive boxes buzzing on their rooftop.

Today Plavinskas arrives home from the couples’ Upstate New York property, where they have more hives. He’s spent the last few days there preparing to harvest honey. A beekeeper’s job changes with the seasons. Late summer into fall is the time to extract honey, but he is careful to leave enough behind so that it can nourish his colony through the winter. Some beekeepers remove all the honey from their hives, which means the bees die over the winter with nothing to eat. They purchase inexpensive new bees each spring instead of maintaining their colony. Some bee farms opt to replace the honey with sugar water so that the bees survive on that through the winter.

“It’s like giving them junk food,” Pahl says, adding that Oh Honey doesn’t do it that way. “We don’t steal all of the bees’ honey; that’s what makes it sustainable beekeeping.”

Oh Honey is also a treatment-free operation. “It means that I don’t treat the bees with any chemicals, medications, or antibiotics,” Plavinskas says. Very few commercial apiaries avoid using these things to combat diseases and mites. Looking for a label that says treatment-free will mean purer honey than an organic label. Plavinskas says organic honey isn’t easily regulated because there’s no way to wrangle bees into pollinating only certified organic plants.

POLLINATING THE PLANET

Five years ago Plavinskas started just like any urban hobbyist: by mail-ordering bees that come shipped in a box. He was inspired to try beekeeping to help the environment. “Bees are one of the most important creatures in our environment,” Plavinskas says. “Two-thirds of our food comes from pollination.” We’re reliant on bees for survival. “They’re amazing creatures,” he says.

He started with two or three hives. By the next year he had 50. Now Oh Honey has more than 200 hives in various Jersey City locations and Upstate.

“He does it extraordinarily well,” Pahl says. “He really just has the hand for it.” Instead of ordering more bees, he breeds them.

Plavinskas says beekeeping is an art. “It’s not like you can learn from a book and go by the letter; it doesn’t work like that. You have to have that knowledge in the back of your head, but then you have to go and learn from the bees because they will show you what to do.”

UP ON THE ROOF

Plavinskas climbs the stairs of his home to check on his hives. He adds some scraps of burlap to a smoker contraption and squeezes the bellows. Smoke pours out and wafts toward the stacked boxes. Pahl says that smoke is supposed to calm the bees. Plavinskas fearlessly walks over to the teeming hives, without his mesh hooded beekeeper suit. He says he gets stung nearly every time he opens a hive, but it doesn’t bother him much.

“I’ve only been stung once, and it’s because I picked one up!” Pahl says. She tried to move a bee so that no one would step on it, and it repaid her kindness by stinging. Pahl doesn’t work as a beekeeper. Her role in Oh Honey is creating cosmetics and tinctures with bee products like wax and propolis, the waxy material used to maintain the hive, along with local herbs.

Oh Honey provides more than just honey and bee products to the community. Plavinskas works with Animal Control and the Jersey City Fire Department whenever they receive a bee-related complaint. In spring, bee swarms will often travel away from their hives scouting a location to start a new colony. People freak out when a cloud of bees attaches itself to a tree or building. “You cannot call an exterminator to come and kill it; it’s illegal to kill honey bees,” Plavinskas says. That’s where he comes in, sometimes with the help of the fire ladder, to grab the bees and re-home them in a bee box. One of the hives that he’s checking on now came from a Jersey City treetop.

CONDO COMBS

Next, Plavinskas heads over to the Liberty Harbor building at 30 Regent St., a condominium on the waterfront between Paulus Hook and Van Vorst Park. On the roof of the stately building with the Art Deco motif a bee colony thrives.

Kira Dudley, who works in events and PR for Liberty Harbor, was drawn to Oh Honey. She thought that Plavinskas and his beehives could form a partnership with Liberty Harbor and manage hives for them on its rooftop. “We liked that his stuff is sustainable and that he’s from Jersey City,” Dudley says. “We like to support our community.” Now two bee colonies enjoy harbor views from the ninth floor of the building.

This fall Plavinskas will harvest honey for Liberty Harbor and hold a presentation for residents about the importance of bees. “We’re looking forward to tasting the honey too,” Dudley says. “We like to call Darius the bee whisperer.”

Plavinskas first met Dudley a year ago when Oh Honey had a vendor table at Liberty Harbor’s block party. Events and farmers markets are another big part of Oh Honey’s mission. Plavinskas bottles honey and sells it along with Pahl’s cosmetic offerings. The couple are regulars at the Riverview Farmers Market in Jersey City Heights, where Pahl says all of the vendors’ children play together like one big family. The market is a unique opportunity for Jersey City shoppers to enjoy honey that is as local as it gets.—JCM