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Destination Wedding
Activities
As brides get more and more creative in planning their
weddings, locations weddings are becoming more and more
popular. Although this might result in a smaller guest list, it
can also result in some fun opportunities for activities.
Many brides like to have their weddings seaside, so they move
the festivities to a beach locale, either on their local coast
or somewhere more exotic like Jamaica or the Bahamas. In any
event, there are several activities that can be planned around
this theme. If the wedding is also a weekend event where guests
will be around for more than just the wedding, the bride can
plan a sailing excursion. Charter a boat for a day and bring
your guests out on the water to relax, rejuvenate, and perhaps
enjoy a meal.
If the wedding is in the Caribbean, how about a cooking
demonstration? The bride and groom can arrange for the wedding
guests to enjoy a complimentary cooking demonstration put on by
the hotel or a local cook. Since much of the food the guests
eat while visiting for the wedding will be different than what
they eat at home, they might enjoy learning how to prepare it
for home enjoyment.
Say the wedding is in Hawaii, another popular destination
wedding location. Here, you can plan several activities around
the location. For example, what about a luau? This could even
take the place of a more formal or conventional sit-down
rehearsal dinner.
In Hawaii, guests will enjoy a hula lesson. Depending on the
age of your guests, be sure there is enough time between the
wedding and the lesson for the resting of aching bones, in case
there are any.
At the wedding itself, there are many ways to incorporate the
location into the ceremony itself. At a beachside reception,
you can play "pass the shell", where a large shell is passed
around and guests "listen" for some advice from the other
world. Once they get a piece of advice (really something they
think of themselves) they share it with the bride and groom,
either verbally, or it can be written into a book for the
couple.
Other pre-wedding activities can include guided tours, shopping
excursions and wine tasting activities (if applicable). If you
choose to include any of these activities keep in mind that the
bride and groom (or their families) are expected to pay for the
bulk of them. If you arrange a sailing excursion, for example,
you are expected to pick up the tab for the trip. Do not tell
people ahead of time that the activity will be x dollars. It's
likely that won't sit well with them.
Since one of the great benefits of the destination wedding is
that only your closest friends and family will likely surround
you, you can plan some meaningful activities that you wouldn't
plan if the wedding were a larger event. For example, you might
plan a slumber party night with close friends that includes
movies, popcorn and drinks in your hotel room, villa or
cottage, depending on where the wedding is held.
Of course, if you plan a destination wedding, for some people
this might double as their vacation. In that event, you might
not want to schedule too many activities but instead let people
find their own activities and entertainment both before and
after the wedding.
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