Pre Wedding
Activities
Planning pre-wedding activities is a
little something extra that's not required, but certainly fun
and entertaining for the guests. If the bride and groom keep in
mind the distance some guests have traveled and keep activities
relevant to that level of fatigue, they're sure to hit on some
winning activities.
As you go about planning activities for the wedding, keep in
mind other factors as well. Do many people have children with
them? Will you provide childcare or will the children be
participants in the activities? If you have several guests who
are older, perhaps activities can be tailored in a ay they can
participate as well.
Some of the more popular pre-wedding activities include things
like a group manicure. All the women in the wedding party or ho
are close to the bride (and certainly this could include men if
they like manicures and want to hang out with the ladies) head
to a nail salon and get their nails done. This can be relaxing
for many women and provide a welcome respite from the hustle
and bustle of the wedding weekend. The men might choose to golf
or play a game of tennis while this is going on.
Many brides and grooms choose to provide structured activities
for their guests prior to the wedding. If the wedding is on a
Saturday night, for example, they might choose to provide a
Friday activity, especially if most guests are local to the
wedding. You might have a wedding luau. Many times pre-wedding
activities center around bachelor and bachelorette parties, but
what about a stag party that includes all the members of the
brides and grooms families? You could plan some fun (and
appropriate) games and head out to a restaurant for a night of
fun and games. Be sure to limit the drinking and carousing as
this might not sit well with some family members.
Here is a fun activity that can be done right before the
wedding. Have someone begin a gift basket. The theme of the
basket is "advice for the couple" and could be started by the
best man or maid of honor. They take the basket to someone
else's house, perhaps an aunt or cousin and leave it on the
doorstep. That person adds an item (a book on how to end
spousal arguments? Or a CD of romantic music?) and brings the
basket to someone else's house. This activity can begin a week
or two before the wedding and everyone should know it is coming
around.
The basket can also be circulated the weekend of the wedding,
but this ill only work if everyone is local and if they know
the basket is coming. In this case, it also might be helpful to
have someone bring the basket to a house, collect the item and
the take the basket to the next location, reducing the need to
have each person take the basket to its next location. Once
it's full, someone can be in charge of putting the basket items
together, wrapping it all up to make it look nice and bringing
it to the bride and groom. It can be delivered right to the
wedding as a gift in and of itself.
Whatever activities you choose, be sure to keep in mind the
needs of your guests and the limitations of those guests. If
you want to plan an activity that includes everyone, and you
choose golf, but grandpa is in a wheelchair or uses a walker,
that might not be the best activity to plan.
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