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Wedding Weekend
ActivitiesWedding Weekend
Activities
Weekend weddings are becoming more popular, particularly as
families are spread further apart. They usually begin on Friday
night, continue with the wedding Saturday and conclude with a
post-wedding breakfast on Sunday before everyone returns
home.
Planning activities for these weekend-long celebrations doesn't
have to be difficult; in fact, it can be quite a bit of fun if
you keep everyone's needs in mind. First, consider the wedding.
Will this be a formal wedding with a sit-down dinner at its
center? If so, you might want to ban a formal rehearsal dinner
and replace it instead with an informal barbecue dinner or
picnic.
But how will you keep people occupied during the long weekend?
There are many activities to consider. Will the wedding be near
a lake? How about planning a day at the lake on Saturday,
filled with pre-wedding activities like swimming races and
beach volleyball.
One popular pre-wedding activity is a scavenger hunt. Prior to
the wedding weekend, a list of meaningful items should be drawn
up, and guests placed in two teams. The list should include
things like "get a brochure from the jewelry store where
(groom) bought (bride)'s ring" or "take a picture of the group
at the location where the couple got engaged". You will have to
tailor the scavenger hunt list to the location of the wedding
and the energy of the guests who will be participating.
You can even offer lavish prizes for the team that wins the
scavenger hunt, such as gift certificates or gourmet food and
wine baskets. It might seem an obvious choice to divide the
teams into groups who know or are related to the bride and
teams who know or are related to the groom, but it might be a
little more fun to mix it up a bit. You can create teams of
friends versus family, or men versus women (always a popular
choice).
Another activity that's popular during wedding weekends is a
competitive sport activity, such as baseball or flag football.
Again, add a special twist. Offer prizes for performance (first
home run gets a kiss from the bride) or make silly rules, like
members of the bridal party have to wear tiaras while running
bases or members of the groom's family should always have their
shirts on backwards.
It's important that during the wedding weekend, planners keep
in mind that the weekend itself might be expensive for some
guests, particularly those who had to fly in for the occasion
and many of the activities should be free, or inexpensive. If
they are more expensive, and planned for the entire group, they
should be paid for by either the bride and groom or their
families.
But there are plenty of activities that don't have to be
expensive, but can provide big bang for the little buck, such
as the scavenger hunt suggested above. If the wedding weekend
guests will mostly be family, you can schedule a home
movie-viewing event, including home movies from both the bride
and groom's families. For even more fun, consider an activity
where the movies are mixed up and the guests have to guess
which family's videos they are watching. This might sound easy,
but depending on the contents, it could be hard, particularly
if the bride and groom are babies in the photos.
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