Page 4 - Lifestyles in Palm Beach Gardens - February '21
P. 4
Page 4, Lifestyles in Palm Beach Gardens
Choosing The Right Wine
For Your Perfect Or Imperfect Valentine!
By Laura Berrio, If you want to plan a sunset picnic on the beach, you need a demi-sec so the sweetness complements the chocolate.
Freelance Writer/Blogger wine that travels well or opt for a bottle of champagne! If you If this is not your first Valentine’s Day and you need to step
There is so much pressure are planning on cooking, then the wine choice needs to pair with it up a notch … pick a vintage from a special year (first date,
on couples to pick the perfect the featured entrée. If you are channeling your inner Julia Childs wedding anniversary, birthday, etc.).
gift for that special someone and preparing Beef Bourguignon, a full bodied, deep red wine A couple of mid-priced favorites of mine would be a 2016
on Valentine’s Day. Planning would be my first choice. Valentines come in many shades of Freemark Abbey Cabernet Sauvignon or a Taittinger Champagne.
a special evening and picking crimson … uncork the perfect red to complement your special Although a little pricey, if you want that very special bottle, 2007
that perfect bottle of wine cupid celebration. Louis Roederer Cristal Champagne and the 2002
can seem daunting on this If all of this seems overwhelming, try starting simple. Plan Michael Magnien will not disappoint!
holiday of “love.” a dessert date! A beautiful bottle of rosé (hot category in wine Just remember to stay true to your tastes
Let’s make picking a currently) or champagne pair nicely with chocolates. The lighter and stick with what you know. Follow your
perfect wine an easy part of the chocolate, the lighter the wine and the darker the chocolate, heart and sip with the one you love!
the planning. Once you decide on what you are going to do the darker, more full bodied the wine. If your love’s favorite is ~ Cheers
and where you are going to do it, the wine choice is narrowed in the middle with buttery, Belgian milk chocolates or white ~ Keep the conversation going and the
down. A picnic outside vs. a formal dinner call for a very chocolate, a sweet wine such as a muscat pairs nicely. If you wine flowing!
different wine. decide to forego the wine and have champagne, select a sec or Follow the Vine at: www.VineVibeUncorked.com.
Northern Notes
Water Facts And Trivia water. A newborn baby, for example, is 78 percent water is important to keep it clean and be mindful of what goes into
and adults are 55 to 60 percent water. The human brain is it. Water is part of a deeply interconnected system. What we
By Katie Roundtree, comprised of about 75 percent water. Interestingly enough, a pour on the ground ends up in our water, and what we spew
Finance Director, tree is also comprised of about 75 percent water. into the sky ends up in our water. Life on earth simply cannot
Northern Palm Beach Usually when solids form, atoms get closer together to form exist without water. Whether or not it can exist on other planets
County Improvement something denser. This is why most solids sink in water. But without water, is a topic for another time.
District solid water, or ice, is actually less dense. It expands by about Sources: www.epa.gov and www.climatekids.nasa.gov.
“We forget that the water 9 percent, which is unusual. The water molecules form rings NPDES tip: Planting a rain garden with native plants
cycle and the life cycle when water freezes. All that space makes ice less dense and somewhere around your home helps lock rain water in the
are one.” – Jacques Yves explains why it floats. This is good because ice floating on top ground, reducing the flow of pollutants and poisons into the
Cousteau of a body of water lets the rest of it stay liquid. If ice sank, drains. Using organic fertilizers and pesticides in your garden
Water is such a simple whole oceans could freeze solid! further protects and brings health to your yard and all the
element, made up of one As you can see, water is essential to life here on earth. It species living there.
oxygen and two hydrogen
molecules, but so essential to
life. A person can live a month without food, but only about a
week without water. However, water is essential to all life, not
just human life. Here are some interesting facts about water.
There are about 332,500,000 cubic miles of water on earth.
That’s about the same amount of water as there was when
the earth was formed! The water from your faucet could
contain molecules that dinosaurs drank or walked through!
The rocky material that formed earth contained some water.
But that probably doesn’t account for all the water we see
today. Comets are mostly water/ice. It’s possible that comets
made regular water deliveries to earth. It would take a lot of
comets to fill the ocean, but comets could well have made a
big contribution.
Water covers 70.9 percent of the planet’s surface and is
recycled constantly by way of the water cycle. The water
cycle is the continuous movement of water within the earth
and atmosphere. It is a complex system that includes many
different processes. Liquid water evaporates into water vapor,
condenses to form clouds, and precipitates back to earth in the
form of rain and snow. Water in different phases moves through
the atmosphere (transportation). Liquid water flows across
land (runoff), into the ground (infiltration and percolation),
and through the ground (groundwater). Groundwater moves
into plants (plant uptake) and evaporates from plants into the
atmosphere (transpiration). On a global basis, evaporation
approximately equals precipitation. There is more water in Welcomes
the atmosphere than in all of our rivers combined. If all of the
water vapor in our planet’s atmosphere fell as water at once
and spread out evenly, it would only cover the globe with
about an inch of water.
Nearly 97 percent of the world’s water is salty, therefore
undrinkable. 2.5 percent of the earth’s fresh water is
unavailable: locked up in glaciers, polar ice caps, atmosphere,
and soil; highly polluted; or lies too far under the earth’s
surface to be extracted at an affordable cost. That leaves
just .5 percent for all of humanity’s needs – its agricultural,
residential, manufacturing, community, and personal needs.
Water regulates the earth’s temperature. It also regulates
the temperature of the human body, carries nutrients and
oxygen to cells, cushions joints, protects organs and tissues,
and removes wastes. The human body is comprised of mostly
Justina Vasiliauskas, o.d.
Eye Physician
561.500.2020 www.mittlemaneye.com
601 University Blvd., Suite 101 | Jupiter, FL 33458
2000 Palm Beach Lakes Blvd., Suite 400 | WPB, FL 33409