After 72 hours on planes and in airports, a wedding disaster was averted with the love and support from the people of Skye.
A wedding nightmare wound up turning into a Celtic dream when, after a plane-load of problems, the local community on the majestic Isle of Skye decided to lend a hand to the visiting betrothed.
Planning to leave a solid, four-day cushion between their flight and their big day on Skye, in the Scottish Hebrides, Florida's Amanda and Paul Riesel suffered every problem in the airline company playbook—including several delays, a cancelation or two, and lost luggage.
Their trip that was supposed to be from Orlando to the UK ended up being rerouted to Philadelphia, and then out of Heathrow, to Inverness and onto Skye; they finally arrived at 11:00 pm on the island the night before their wedding, having spent a full 72 hours aboard planes, or trapped in airports.
Enter Rosie Woodhouse, the wedding photographer. Getting word of their difficulties, and that without everything but their rings, they were close to giving up on their long-planned Skye wedding, she felt she had to do something.
"I told them I was sure I could make this work, and Skye is an amazing place," Woodhouse told the BBC. Rosie posted an appeal to a social media community and even before breakfast, local islanders had responded brilliantly. "We had a full kilt set for Paul and a beautiful wedding dress for Amanda," she said.
The wedding dress was worn by a local cafeteria lady at a school, a profession to which Amanda, in a wild coincidence, is also employed. She felt there was no better solution than to wear the special garment of a special woman who cared for children as Amanda does.
"The people of Skye will be famous in Orlando because we will tell anyone who will listen that they are the reason our love was cemented into a perfectly imperfect wedding day," Amanda added.
With its emerald green grass, dark moody skies, rugged landscape, and wild coasts, a place doesn't come much better after three days in airports than the Isle of Skye, and even though the wedding lost much of the veneer they had planned, the pictures at least, convey that everything worked out in the end.
A California woman who recently overcame homelessness is now a millionaire after winning the $5 million prize in a lottery scratch-off game. Lucia Forseth had no housing in 2017, but she battled back to overcome the challenges within a few years. But this month Ms. Forseth can put any doubt behind her, becoming a multimillionaire […]
Be the first to comment