We live
on a lovely park in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and during the summer - and
especially in June - we have the opportunity to sit on our patio and
participate in the joyous events from afar.
Laura Breck |
There
are usually Friday evening weddings, often two weddings on Saturday, and some
couples even exchange vows Sunday afternoon. Then there are the couples who make the
park their after-wedding photo destination. Sometimes three or four on a Saturday
afternoon.
The
bride and groom usually arrive by limousine or party busses of all colors:
black, white, silver, and even pink. Once, cute couple rode in on an old fire
truck.
We know
it’ll be a big wedding when a huge truck rolls in around noon and deposits a few
hundred plastic chairs. But sometimes the service is quick, and people stand.
Often, the participants are each holding a matching umbrella if the weather is
bad. Good planning by the bride and groom.
Almost
every wedding has music, and it has ranged from a string quartet to a keyboardist
who sang rather off key (it had to be a family member) to Christian heavy metal
blaring from huge speakers. And the bagpipes! We've witnessed lots of kilted Scotts
playing bagpipes over the years!
Since
we’re downtown, we do have a homeless population. More than once, a group of
vagrants has wandered into the park to watch the wedding. One hot day, two of the
fellows decided it would be nice to cool down by taking off their shirts and
splashing on some of the water from the fountain. The silent surprise of the
wedding attendees was quickly followed by a few wedding guests rousting the
uninvited bathers.
Sometimes
nature plays an odd role in the wedding. After a Native American couple had
said their vows, they were walking back toward us, toward their limo, and a
huge oak tree - much larger than I could even get my arms around - cracked and
fell across the street just yards behind their limo. Now, I don’t purport to be
an expert on Native American mysticism, but I can’t imagine that was a good
omen!
On warm weekend evenings, as the officiant
pronounces the couple legally bound, my husband and I lift our glasses of wine
in a silent toast to marriage. May all of them be as happy or happier than they
are on their special day.
I'd love to hear about the wild things you've seen at weddings. Anything nuttier than what I've seen?
I'd love to hear about the wild things you've seen at weddings. Anything nuttier than what I've seen?
Happy
Wedding Season!
Laura~Smart Women ~Sexy Men ~Seductive Romance
LauraBreck.com
~Dancing in a Hurricane is available in digital formats at Amazon, Smashwords, and Barnes & Noble and in paperback at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Createspace
~Love in the Land of Lakes is available in digital format at Smashwords, All Romance Ebooks, Barnes & Noble, and Amazon, and in paperback at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Createspace
6 comments:
Laura, You're very lucky to get to share in so much happiness. Thanks for sharing with us.
Laura, how much fun to witness so many weddings without even having to buy a present!
Think of all the different weddings you've witness - fodder for the writing mill when you have to write wedding scenes. Sounds like a lovely way to spend a June afternoon.
What a great post! I can't say I've ever been to a wierd wedding. All my friends and relatives are too conservative, I suppose.
How about my own wedding? I'm sure you've heard the story, but I'm happy to share it here. At the end of the ceremony the priest presented us as Mr. and Mrs. Chris Vitek - Chris is my husbands brother. Then, instead of one limo we had two, dividing the party up. To make a long story short, I, the bride, performed the Exorcist on the roadside due to do too much alcohol mixed with cigar smoke. Missed the dinner and cake cutting because I was sleeping things off, and returned to the dance underway. My husband and I had our first dance, took care of the garter and bouquet, and the remainder of the evening continued. Of course, this is the shortened version of the evening. We are still married and will celebrate 24 years of marriage this fall.
At my wedding reception, a candle in the flower arrangement on the head table started burning a couple leaves. My elder father tried to throw his drink, a glass of brandy, on it. Yikes! My sister-in-law grabbed his arm and poured her water over it. We added a couple more glasses to be sure, then laughed ourselves silly since no one else even noticed.
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