Wedding Cruises and Honeymoons
One of the biggest advantages of wedding cruises is that they easily give way towards honeymoons.
When a couple sits down to plan a wedding at a Church, the planning for the honeymoon is almost always going to be separate from the planning for the wedding and the wedding reception.
The reason for this is that the wedding will take place in the Church and it is quite possible that the reception might as well, but the honeymoon is going to be somewhere completely removed from the Church area.
This means logically that it does not make much sense to plan them together.
This is not so for wedding cruises.
The whole idea behind a wedding cruise is that it is designed not only to be more emotional and romantic, but also to be more boisterous.
This means that the wedding reception has already created the festive atmosphere that comes with departing on a honeymoon so the bride and groom are already in the appropriate mood to go out and celebrate their marriage through honeymooning.
Additionally, it is also advantageous from a geographical perspective.
When you consider something like a tropical island cruise where the ship actually lands at a number of different ports of call along the way, it makes it easier to have the wedding ceremony during the cruise and then easily branch off for the honeymoon when all is said and done.
In order to illustrate the ease, let us take an example.
A typical Caribbean cruise on sale now lasts for two weeks and visits three different Caribbean islands during the actual tour (most of the cruise is at sea and the ship itself has a lot of amenities).
This ship does have the facilities necessary to have a wedding cruise ceremony on the ship itself or alternatively there is the option of having it at one of the ports of call.
A very common wedding cruise structure that might happen on this ship would be to have the wedding two or three days into the voyage and then disembark for a week at the first port of call.
While the cruise ship visits the other ports the couple has their honeymoon and they get back on the cruise ship when it re-visits their port of call on the way back to the starting point.
The whole process is fluid and this makes it a lot easier to organize than most other wedding and honeymoon combinations.
When a couple sits down to plan a wedding at a Church, the planning for the honeymoon is almost always going to be separate from the planning for the wedding and the wedding reception.
The reason for this is that the wedding will take place in the Church and it is quite possible that the reception might as well, but the honeymoon is going to be somewhere completely removed from the Church area.
This means logically that it does not make much sense to plan them together.
This is not so for wedding cruises.
The whole idea behind a wedding cruise is that it is designed not only to be more emotional and romantic, but also to be more boisterous.
This means that the wedding reception has already created the festive atmosphere that comes with departing on a honeymoon so the bride and groom are already in the appropriate mood to go out and celebrate their marriage through honeymooning.
Additionally, it is also advantageous from a geographical perspective.
When you consider something like a tropical island cruise where the ship actually lands at a number of different ports of call along the way, it makes it easier to have the wedding ceremony during the cruise and then easily branch off for the honeymoon when all is said and done.
In order to illustrate the ease, let us take an example.
A typical Caribbean cruise on sale now lasts for two weeks and visits three different Caribbean islands during the actual tour (most of the cruise is at sea and the ship itself has a lot of amenities).
This ship does have the facilities necessary to have a wedding cruise ceremony on the ship itself or alternatively there is the option of having it at one of the ports of call.
A very common wedding cruise structure that might happen on this ship would be to have the wedding two or three days into the voyage and then disembark for a week at the first port of call.
While the cruise ship visits the other ports the couple has their honeymoon and they get back on the cruise ship when it re-visits their port of call on the way back to the starting point.
The whole process is fluid and this makes it a lot easier to organize than most other wedding and honeymoon combinations.