Cape Breton Post

Couples altering wedding plans.

Prepare for a busy wedding season in 2021 as couples alter, postpone plans due to COVID-19

- DANETTE DOOLEY SPECIAL TO SALTWIRE NETWORK danette@nl.rogers.com @capebreton post

A Paradise, N.L.-based wedding and events planner says the COVID-19 pandemic has stalled the wedding industry for 2020.

Kathy Dicks-Peyton is owner and event strategist for Functional Communicat­ions & Events. She has more than 30 years experience in business/government communicat­ions, marketing and event planning.

Her business involves marriage commission­ing, wedding planning and co-ordinating, as well as corporate events and communicat­ions.

Ninety-eight per cent of her 2020 wedding and event business has been reschedule­d to 2021, she said, resulting in a considerab­le loss of income.

“It’s very unfortunat­e that weddings as we know them — grand, festive events with our close friends and families — won’t be the norm again for awhile,” Dicks-Peyton said via e-mail.

If all goes well, she said, next year’s wedding season will be incredibly busy, especially when couples who were planning to be married in 2021 — and are still looking to book vendors — are factored in. The dates they are looking for may not be available due to reschedule­d 2020 events, she said.

Dicks-Peyton encourages couples to think about what’s most important and work to make their special days the celebratio­ns they are meant to be surrounded by the people who love them.

Although the majority of couples are postponing their weddings, others are going ahead with their plans, she said.

“I have been performing wedding ceremonies throughout the pandemic, right from when only five people could attend (commission­er, couple and two witnesses). People have respected the public health orders and have followed the required health and safety measures,” she said.

Couples who are choosing to go ahead with their ceremonies are doing so because, at the end of the day, the commitment they are making is not all about the fancy decoration­s, venues and flowers, she said.

“It’s about their love for each other. Go ahead, get married and plan your big celebratio­n for later because you deserve it,” she said.

“Whether you choose a sunrise ceremony on the cliffs of Logy Bay (N.L.) or an intimate garden event — remember 2020 for more than just COVID-19,” she added.

INTIMATE CEREMONY

Ashley Wright and Evan Vanderveld­e have not only cut their wedding guest list from 170 to six people, they have also changed their wedding date and the province where the ceremony will take place.

Wright is from P.E.I. Vanderveld­e is from Ontario. They both live in Cole Harbour.

The couple’s initial plan was to get married on July 31 in P.E.I.

But by early June, Wright said, the airline flights her fiancé’s family had booked from Ontario to P.E.I. had been cancelled.

The couple has now decided to go with a small wedding in Wright’s sister’s backyard in Lawrenceto­wn, outside of Halifax. The ceremony is planned for Friday.

“There will be six of us … and that includes Evan and I.” All six live in Nova Scotia. “It will be very small, very intimate, very casual,” Wright said.

Financiall­y, Wright said, they are out money, as they had a non-refundable deposit on the venue in P.E.I.

Thankfully, she said, deposits placed on other wedding services were refunded.

When asked how he felt about the changes, Vanderveld­e said his biggest disappoint­ment is that his immediate family in Ontario can’t attend his wedding. However, he’s fine with a small, intimate ceremony.

COVID-19 may have changed their plans, Wright said, but the pandemic has not dimmed their enthusiasm for their special day.

“It’s certainly been a unique process along the way and one that we’ll be able to share with our children and our grandchild­ren. But, for us, marriage is all about us two and, at the end of the day, as long as we are married, that’s the most important thing. We are just so excited to start the next chapter of our lives,” Wright said.

“There will be many more celebratio­ns still to come. We’ve got a whole lifetime to celebrate with people,” Vanderveld­e added.

ALTERED PLANS

Travis Cummiskey is a livestock farmer from Tarantum, P.E.I., where he lives, and a workplace assistant with Prince Edward Island’s Public Schools Branch.

Cummiskey’s fiancée, June-Marie Noakes, is from Winnipeg, Man., where she currently lives.

The couple sent invitation­s for their August wedding, to take place in Manitoba, to about 150 family and friends earlier this year. As COVID19 took its grip in communitie­s across the country, they soon realized their plans were unrealisti­c.

They slashed their invitees from 150 to 50 guests — in keeping with gathering restrictio­ns in place in Manitoba.

“Children are very important to both Travis and I … I work in childcare and I never envisioned my wedding without all of the children that I know … So, it’s been really tough calling people to tell them. But friends and family have been super understand­ing,” Noakes said during a recent phone interview.

Cummiskey and some family members from Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia will be going to Winnipeg to self-isolate for 14 days before the wedding on Aug. 15. They will also need to self-isolate once they return home.

Cummiskey said both he and his fiancée thought about postponing their wedding, but neither wanted to be separated by distance any longer.

“We had booked a hall, originally, but they told us there was no way they could do it. Our caterer has been absolutely phenomenal. She worked out of a hall in another town just outside of Winnipeg and they were willing to take our reception,” he said.

Cummiskey said some decoration­s they bought will not be used because of the restrictio­ns.

The reduced guest list has saved the couple some money, but overall, the money situation hasn’t changed too much, he said.

Cummiskey had planned to take his new bride on a surprise honeymoon in the Dakotas but that plan has been shelved.

“Our honeymoon will mostly be us driving back to Prince Edward Island,” he said.

Prince Edward Island is where the couple will start their lives together and that’s just fine with Noakes.

“What’s keeping me going through all of this is that we will finally be together. I’m happy that we are getting to close the distance,” she said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Ashley Wright and Evan Vanderveld­e will be married on Friday. It’s not the wedding the couple had planned, but Wright says it will be a story to share with their children and grandchild­ren.
CONTRIBUTE­D Ashley Wright and Evan Vanderveld­e will be married on Friday. It’s not the wedding the couple had planned, but Wright says it will be a story to share with their children and grandchild­ren.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Travis Cummiskey and June-Marie Noakes will be married on Aug. 15 in Noakes home province of Manitoba. Their wedding will be a scaled-down version of what they had originally planned.
CONTRIBUTE­D Travis Cummiskey and June-Marie Noakes will be married on Aug. 15 in Noakes home province of Manitoba. Their wedding will be a scaled-down version of what they had originally planned.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Kathy Dicks-Peyton, centre, marries Nancy and Glenn Andrews at Murray’s Pond in Portugal Cove-St. Philips, N.L. Ninety-eight per cent of her 2020 wedding and event business has been reschedule­d to 2021, although some couples have opted to go ahead with much smaller events.
CONTRIBUTE­D Kathy Dicks-Peyton, centre, marries Nancy and Glenn Andrews at Murray’s Pond in Portugal Cove-St. Philips, N.L. Ninety-eight per cent of her 2020 wedding and event business has been reschedule­d to 2021, although some couples have opted to go ahead with much smaller events.

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