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Many are opting to tie the
knot far away from home and the hassles of the
traditional catered affair. And travel
experts say whether couples choose a beach in
the Caribbean or a castle in Spain, combining
wedding, reception and honeymoon can be kinder
to their nerves and their wallet.
"It's one stop shopping!
Wedding and honeymoon and no problems with
tuxes, caterers and flowers," said Jeff Krudop
of Travel Leaders in Fort Wayne, Indiana. "I
would say about 50 per cent of our leisure
business is somehow related to a destination
wedding or vow renewal." Krudop says it's
a niche market that keeps growing.
"It's most popular with young
couples in their 20s and 30's who want to make a
big vacation with family and friends. It's also
very popular with repeat marriages." He
said Mexico, Hawaii, Florida and the Caribbean
remain the most popular destinations, although
recently more clients are requesting Europe or
South America.
Sandals Resorts in the
Caribbean has been specialising in destination
weddings for 30 years. "We began concept of
combining wedding and honeymoon in one," said
Sandals Resort spokesperson Vanessa Lane. "We
coined the term 'weddingmoon' because as soon as
the wedding is over, honeymoon begins."
Lane, citing a market report
in Destination Weddings and Honeymoons
magazine, said the destination weddings
market has seen a 400 percent increase in last
ten years. "It's the ease of having
everything included, of getting away with family
and friends," she explained. Celebrities
have fuelled the trend, according to Lane. Tom
Cruise wed Katie Holmes at a castle in Italy;
Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner married in Turks
and Caicos.
Then there's the money
factor. Unlike traditional receptions, which
might have to accommodate 250 guests,
destination weddings are attended only by family
and a few close friends. "Often brides
cover the reception and guests pay their own
way," Lane explained. "And guests can
contribute to offset the costs, or pay for
extras for the couple, like a spa treatment or a
candlelit dinner," she said.
For some couples, nothing
says romance like a shipboard ceremony.
"Norwegian Cruise Line performs more than 400
weddings annually," according to spokesperson
Courtney Recht. And there's a Norwegian wedding
planner at the ready to handle every detail.
The cruise line offers package deals for
shipboard weddings, as well as for those held on
dry land, and from ports in the United States,
Canada, Mexico, Europe, the Caribbean, and
Bermuda.
If
you're not quite there yet, Norwegian will
provide a consultant to mastermind your proposal
at sea. If you've been there and done that, it
will help you renew your vows.
But weddings are the
mainstay.
"Couples are seeking
non-traditional weddings," said Marcia Grant, a
travel agent with Travel Leaders in North Oaks,
Minnesota. "Less stress, more memorable,
all-inclusive."
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