Times Colonist

Couple catch wedding fever as they pack for garden party

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

LONDON — Nicola Day’s flight to London will land just hours before Prince Harry is set to wed Meghan Markle at Windsor Castle, and Day is determined to not let jet lag stand in the way of royal revelry.

The Kingston, Ont., resident expects to spend the first hours of her vacation searching for a place to watch Saturday’s noon spectacle.

“We’ll make an effort to find somewhere to watch it and be among the people,” Day says of plans she’s making for herself and her husband.

“They really are historical events. These weddings are a big deal around the whole world. I’m all for celebratin­g this wedding.”

The Days are scheduled to arrive just in time to soak in what’s sure to be an explosion of patriotic fervour for the people’s prince and his California­n-born fiancée. But the main reason they’re heading to the United Kingdom is for a separate royal event altogether — a garden party at Buckingham Palace to celebrate the work of the Prince’s Charities, which supports the philanthro­py of Prince Charles.

Steve Day scored an invitation as a graduate of an entreprene­ur program run by the group’s Canadian chapter. The national program helps Canadian Armed Forces members switch to civilian life by offering education and resources to launch their own business.

Day is one of three Canadian graduates invited to the garden party on May 22, which will also mark the 70th birthday year of the Prince of Wales. The prince’s actual birthday is Nov. 14.

“It’s all in the private portion of Buckingham Palace that the public can’t get access to, so that’s why it’s kind of neat,” Steve Day says, musing on the possibilit­y of other royals showing up.

“It is a garden party for Charles’s 70th birthday, so I’d be very surprised if the entire Royal Family wasn’t there.”

Word is that the newlyweds themselves may attend — Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have reportedly chosen the celebratio­n as their first official event as a married couple.

Steve Day says he’s a fan of the younger prince, who has focused much of his charity work on wounded veterans through his passion project, the Invictus Games.

“I feel an affinity with Prince Harry as a retired vet who’s fought in Afghanista­n. I like what he’s doing to support veterans,” says Steve Day, who spent more than a year of cumulative duty in Afghanista­n several times between 2003 and 2011.

Before Tuesday’s garden party, there are preparatio­ns to be made.

Nicola Day says she’s watching online videos of past garden parties to nail down the protocol, and is fretting over her attire. Women are being asked to wear a day dress with an optional hat, or a uniform with no medal. Men are instructed to wear a morning coat, lounge suit or a uniform with no medal.

“Let me tell you, it’s hard to find a nice hat in Kingston,” Nicola Day says.

“My friend said: ‘You should go to Ottawa or Toronto and look for a hat.’ So I may just have to look when we actually get to London and I’ll probably spend a fortune. But I may just have to do it, because it is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y.”

Nicola Day says the garden party will include high tea and a formal parade, in which the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall will move through the guests.

As for the rest of their week-long trip, the couple hopes to hit as many tourist hotspots as possible: the tower of Big Ben, the London Eye, Westminste­r Abbey and the site of the wedding, Windsor Castle, about 40 kilometres west of London.

The town of Windsor has said it expects 100,000 visitors to head there to see the newlyweds travel in procession after Saturday’s ceremony.

Travel experts expect the number of visitors to the U.K. will increase after the wedding, but some agents reported already seeing a spike in interest because of the wedding, according to an informal survey by travel group TLNetwork.ca.

A spokeswoma­n for the travel fare website Expedia.ca says it has seen a 175 per cent increase year-over-year in flight search data for travel to London over the wedding weekend.

Canadians appear to be among those searching for deals.

Charles Purdue Pulido, of Strawberry Tours in London, said he’s seen an increase in Canadian bookings for his agency, which offers tours including one focused on various monarchs throughout history.

Pulido says the company has added a special early morning tour Saturday that will pass through the city’s royal landmarks and conclude with a screening of the wedding at a pub in central London.

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