It could have been a sparking, winter day ... Christmas, New Years, Valentine Day theme? Like you have a choice about the weather when the church and the reception hall are already booked and the guests invited. Such is life eh? In contrast to the UK, the weather in the USA (outside of southern California) is not as predictable, on a month-by-month basis as in the UK. I've seen rainy days, or portions of rainy days, at many summer weddings in the USA In Florida, in the Midwest and in the southern ("Old South") states; one might even get a tornado or a hurricane in the late spring, summer. or during the early autumn. I In the northern states; depending upon where one lives in the any one of those northern (of the 48 contiguous, states) during the late autumn, winter, or early spring; one might have a wedding day blizzard (or at least a snowfall). Or one could have a huge thunderstorm with lightening and chrashing thunder (summertime)
I was wondering the same thing. Plus, this is either right before or right after Prince Andrew's birth, so they knew the queen would not have been able to attend. Was this perhaps a "shotgun" wedding?
Incredible to see 😍😍😍
A little bit of history .... Thx. 😊
I love a winter wedding. Let it snow.
Why oh why would anyone get married in bad winter weather?
It could have been a sparking, winter day ... Christmas, New Years, Valentine Day theme?
Like you have a choice about the weather when the church and the reception hall are
already booked and the guests invited. Such is life eh?
In contrast to the UK, the weather in the USA (outside of southern California) is
not as predictable, on a month-by-month basis as in the UK.
I've seen rainy days, or portions of rainy days, at many summer weddings in the
USA In Florida, in the Midwest and in the southern ("Old South") states; one might
even get a tornado or a hurricane in the late spring, summer. or during the early
autumn. I
In the northern states; depending upon where one lives in the any one of those
northern (of the 48 contiguous, states) during the late autumn, winter, or early
spring; one might have a wedding day blizzard (or at least a snowfall). Or
one could have a huge thunderstorm with lightening and chrashing thunder
(summertime)
I was wondering the same thing. Plus, this is either right before or right after Prince Andrew's birth, so they knew the queen would not have been able to attend. Was this perhaps a "shotgun" wedding?