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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To consider having my reception 40 minutes drive from my wedding reception...

216 replies

DontWantToBeAWeddingCF · 06/05/2018 23:57

And if I did do this, how could I make it work best for my guests? Sorry if this is long, want to get everything in. And I am a long term poster but have name changed for this as a known MNetter in real life.

I know MN loves a wedding thread and I have no desire to be a bridezilla or a CF. I want everyone to enjoy our wedding and not feel stressed or put out, so throwing this one to the lions before any steadfast plans are made. My DSis is also marrying next year so conscious of not booking anything too close to hers as we are lucky to have a great big lovely family who all get on, so don’t want people travelling around the country too much too close together.

The reason I’m considering this is I would like to marry in my church, where I am an active member and part of the community. Church is walking distance from home, and very much a ‘home’ church. I would love that feeling of getting married in a church I’ll be back to every week and is part of me. They are also perfectly comfortable with my DP not being a Christian and happy to marry us there despite this. DP is happy to marry in church because he knows how important it is to me, and the important thing for him is saying his vows not where he says them.

We have always talked about having our reception at his parents, they own loads of land and we can have the run of fields. I never pictured my wedding in a posh hotel or stately home, I want outside and tents and a very chilled atmosphere. People could pitch tents overnight if they wanted, it’ll be so easy for the many children who will be invited as there’s so much space to play. We’ve talked about hiring some soft play equipment and maybe a bouncy castle, things we couldn’t easily do in another venue.

But DPILs are 40 minutes drive from our home and church. I’d love to have both the church I want and the reception we want, but wonder if it will just be a giant faff for everyone. I’m thinking about how I could make it as easy as possible, probably hire some buses from the church to the reception so guests don’t have to worry about that transport. The vast majority of guests will be from around home/near church area, so could get a cab/bus/lift to church for the ceremony, would be taken to the reception and then could go from there home to a hotel or home. I’m not sure we could arrange transport home as well, but maybe to the closest hotel. Drivers could drive between.

The space means we can invite everyone we want - see aforementioned big, lovely family, as well as many friends - a conservative first draft list is at 130/140 people including all the children, though of course aware not all would be able to make it. We don’t want to have evening only invites, everyone will be invited to the whole day, but would be happy for people to just come to the ceremony or reception if that was easier for them. There will be more than enough food and drink for everyone, we want to be good hosts.

Fully ready to be told this is unreasonable, in which case I will probably explore churches close to DPILs to find one that would fit. For me God would be in any church, although I would prefer my own. It’s within the same diocese so my vicar might be able to make a case for me not going to another church for weeks beforehand, though would probably need to be there a few weeks as a bans are read. I have also looked at options for receptions close to my church but there’s nothing that feels right that would be within our budget - my church doesn’t have a church hall or any land around it to pitch a marquee.

Would really welcome people’s thoughts, how could I make this work for you as my guest? Or can I not? What should I be thinking about that I might have forgotten? The most important thing is us getting married, not the wedding, but would love to be able to really celebrate it as well.

Thanks for getting this far.

OP posts:
DontWantToBeAWeddingCF · 07/05/2018 10:32

@AlannaOfTrebond great idea! Did you buy bell tents? £30 is very cheap. Or a different kind of tipi? We could definitely do something like this, battery powered lights in each tent, air mattresses etc.

OP posts:
bakingdemon · 07/05/2018 10:34

We planned our wedding entirely around the church we wanted to get married in, and I think you are totally right to do so. Put on some buses and make sure there's plenty of parking for people who drive, and that should be fine. If it's a summer wedding, will you be inviting people to camp if they want to? Is there enough space to do that?

DontWantToBeAWeddingCF · 07/05/2018 10:34

@RexManning will bear in mind! It’s not rural though, it would be very easy for people to book cabs from venue into town. Even Uber covers it.

OP posts:
DontWantToBeAWeddingCF · 07/05/2018 10:35

@bakingdemon yes we’ve mentioned camping a lot throughout the thread, it will likely be an option for those that want it

OP posts:
WhatsGoingOnEh · 07/05/2018 10:37

OP, have a lovely wedding! Someone asked upthread what the actual distance is between the church and the reception. What is it?

AsAProfessionalFekko · 07/05/2018 10:37

We did but the location was stunning and this was before you could get married in other places (I think). We had coaches for those who did the want to drive.

Shutupanddance1 · 07/05/2018 10:38

Nearly everyone in Ireland has their ceremony and reception separate with drives of between 10 mins to over 1 hour - we all manage without getting lost etc. I’d say you’ll be fine

AlannaOfTrebond · 07/05/2018 10:38

We used this style OP. Can't find any at £30 anymore but can see a few places selling them for £50.

passmetheloppers · 07/05/2018 10:40

A relative of mine had their reception a similar distance away - they hired a coach from the wedding to the reception, and then on the return journey about midnight the coach driver drove all round the town and local villages dropping people at home. Worked really well.

ADishBestEatenCold · 07/05/2018 10:42

"But DPILs are 40 minutes drive from our home and church."

What distance is a 40 minute drive? For example, 40 minutes through a fairly built up 30 mph area might be 20 miles. A 40 minute drive down the motorway would be closer to 45 miles.

The latter might make taxi fares very prohibitive, meaning that guests only had the option of either staying over (be that camping or a hotel) or driving (so no drink) home themselves.

Would you keep the coach to take people home?

PutTheChocEggDown · 07/05/2018 10:42

Perfectly normal here. Most people had cars and we put on a coach for folks travelling by train.

FASH84 · 07/05/2018 10:51

OP it sounds fab, and what you'll gather from this thread is amongst your guests will be the majority, up for a laugh and will get there however needed (the bus is a great idea) and the odd one or two who will moan unless everything is five minutes from their house. You know your crowd and you have thought about potential issues and inconveniences , enjoy it the way you want it!

DontWantToBeAWeddingCF · 07/05/2018 10:53

I’ve mentioned the drive a few times - it’s motorway, motorway, an A road, about 24/25 miles. It takes us about 35 minutes, I’ve rounded up to 40. Taxis back home would be expensive, about £50 but a 5 seater split between people isn’t that much.

Trying not be outing, but PIL actually lived here for a long time before moving there, lots of our friends also have connections to the other (reception) town and are used to going back and forth between the two. I had a birthday party in reception town last year and people travelled from here to there for that, as well as from elsewhere, so journeys around that areas and from and too there won’t seem crazy to most people.

OP posts:
DontWantToBeAWeddingCF · 07/05/2018 10:57

Oh, and first two motorway bits can actually be missed out, and get straight on to the A road. Takes an extra 5 minutes but an option if there’s problems on either motorway. We do both options interchangeably all the time.

OP posts:
TimeIhadaNameChange · 07/05/2018 10:58

What about having cake and, say, fruit juice at the church after the ceremony? I'm just thinking, if it's a 40 min drive to the reception, and then you spent 30 mins to an hour on photos before the reception, that's a long time for people to wait for food.

FASH84 · 07/05/2018 11:05

Some people sound very hungry! Eat some breakfast... Alternatively make sure the is afternoon tea/scones etc nothing too elaborate, available for when people arrive, you might arrive after because of photos etc and then there might be more photography time at the reception venue. We did this and then arrived to find no one had started eating anything because my mum did they had to wait for us, when the whole point was to feed them so they didn't feel they were hanging around 🙈🙈

WomaninGreen · 07/05/2018 11:05

OP I agree with the poster who said make sure there's something to drink before the 40 min drive

I got stuck doing that on the hottest day of that year while in wedding finery - it was a mare, there was a traffic jam somewhere and luckily we had kept some canned drinks in the car etc because the B&G just went off from the church without offering anything.

I will also say please don't be offended by anyone saying no. This is def the type of wedding I wouldn't attend any more because it's such a lot of hassle to attend what's essentially a party where you don't see the bride and groom anyway.

also 40 mins was a generous assessment on a normal day - make it the hottest Saturday of the year and everyone was on the road - so realistically we planned for at least an hour which was lucky.

so if you don't want to be a wedding CF, it's worth keeping in mind that some people will wish you well but just don't feel able to do the day, or will do party or church but not both.

FASH84 · 07/05/2018 11:05

*for when they arrive at the reception location

DontWantToBeAWeddingCF · 07/05/2018 11:11

We will have drinks and biscuits at the church straight after the ceremony, so people have some refreshment while we’re having a few photos there. I don’t want hours and hours of photos anywhere anyway, just a few main ones and then candid ones later. There’s always a table with water and juice at the back of the church after our services anyway, it’s the sort of church where people hang around and chat so this would be normal for me.

I would completely understand if anyone only felt able to come to one half or neither.

OP posts:
Lizzie48 · 07/05/2018 11:12

I did something similar actually. I spent a lot of time sorting out the logistics of getting people there. It was also my home church, though not where I grew up, and my friends from church willingly helped out with lifts for those without cars. One couple used my car to get there and had a lift back. (This backfired spectacularly, though, as they put the keys in my handbag, not realising that I wouldn't be driving my car until after the honeymoon and my DSis was going to be using the car. So we had to drive back to the hotel with the car keys. We got to see some of our friends again, though!)

I wouldn't do the camping personally but the children will love it and those who don't like the idea can book into the hotel.

Flyingpompom · 07/05/2018 11:17

OP your wedding sounds amazing, I'm slightly jealous!
All these people saying 40 minutes is too far, unfair to expect people to drive/stay over night...do you all only go to weddings of local friends and family? The OP us only concerned about the distance between the two venues, and I think she has thought about the logistics of that carefully. Surely ending the night 40 minutes from home is quite normal for a celebration? My best friend lives an hour away from me, should I never go to her parties?

DontWantToBeAWeddingCF · 07/05/2018 11:18

@TimeIhadaNameChange yes I’d do this automatically, drinks at the back are standard after our usual service let alone a wedding, so wouldn’t occur to me not to do that that.

OP posts:
Noboozeforme · 07/05/2018 11:24

I've been to a wedding lime this. Was the best I've ever been too!

Loads of people pitched tents the night before the wedding.. others arrived the morning of the wedding. The firm who provided the teepee (massive one!!) For the actual wedding also provided and pitched mini teepees for quests to sleep in (for a reasonable rate). People drove to the ceremony then back to the reception. If people want to go home that evening .. then they didn't drink. Others drank and went to local hotels .. others camped.

maggienolia · 07/05/2018 11:28

Anyone else getting tipi wedding adverts on the page now?
Sounds good to me OP. Have a lovely day.

HeedMove · 07/05/2018 11:30

If I were you id offer a coach from pil to church that way people can leave their car there if staying over night and drive home in morning. So coach leaves from in laws to church. Then church back to inlaws after church (needs to be big enough for everyone from your village to get on too) then at end of night its final journey is back to your village with everyone on it who is returning back there.

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