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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be annoyed about this wedding (and what would you do)

67 replies

MonaLisaDoesntSmile · 22/04/2019 20:21

I have recently been invited to a wedding of a colleague last week. It was a very last-minute affair- I think they had the date and invited a number of people, but last minute planned a bigger event.
The invite did say we were only invited for the evening part of the wedding, and the time.
The timeline they said would bea ceremony at the hotel, the the invited guests having dinner, and then after the dinner evening-only (so me and other colleagues) would arrive and they then wanted to do cake cutting with all the guests at X hour. Which is all fine up until now.

The hotel is in some godforsaken part of the country, and we spent considerable amount of time and money to get there (it is actually close to noone, not his nor her family nor friends), pay for somewhere to stay etc. A couple of people from the office were going, some of us sigt a +1, some on their own, so we all clubbed in together for transport and a flat for the night to bring expenses down. But still fine- we were looking forward towards a nice evening.

When we arrived, it turned out the schedule must have changed, the cake had been cut, and that everyone was still having their main meal- so a group of some 20-25 of us, including some other guests who we did not know and who were also evening-only, were ushered into a corner of the dining room, watching everyone eat for the next 30 minutes.

Eventually the bar was opened, we got some drinks. The groom, our colleague, passed by to say hi and tell us it was an open bar, so all drinks free etc. however, there seemed to be no food or whatsoever for the evening only guests. Nothing at all. No buffet, finger food, not even crisps (the bar also had no food- just alcohol). That's the last time we have really seen him.

We all have been to weddigns before, and usually some sort of food was provided. We only had a quick meal after leaving work, so we were a bit hungry, but by 10 there was still nothing to eat, and at 11 I just left with my plus 1, as we were tired after 3 hours in a car and we were both fed up and tired and hungry and drinking on empty stomach was just not the thing I wanted to do all night. I know wedding is not all about food, but it just felt bizarre like the whole big group of us was a gigantic fifth wheel.

And here is a question- the couple asked for a) expensive gift from the list (not happening!!!) or b) money into an account that would go towards their deposit. They sent the invite late, so we have not sorted it out before the wedding.
Quite frankly, I'm not sure how much people would pay as a gift usually, but also under circumstances of spending a lot of money to get somewhere only to be able to drink two bears and a glass of wine? How much would people think it's OK?
Maybe I'm being unnecessarily upset, I would not mind being generous if we actually had a good time, but we didn't. Don't want to look like a cheapskate either.

OP posts:
NaturatintGoldenChestnut · 22/04/2019 23:44

I'd never have expected such an invitation at all. They're fucking cheeky to send evening invitations requiring people to travel and tell their guests to front them money on top of that. £100 for two beers and a glass of wine and how dare they expect any food at all?! Nope. Really wouldn't give a shit if I 'looked' cheap, they're the cheap bastards for not supplying food at a wedding. I'd give them a nice card and a bottle of fizz.

Who ‘pops’ £100 in an envelope?

Bullshitters on MN! They 'pop' everywhere. It's bollocks.

DSHathawayGivesMeFannyGallops · 23/04/2019 00:06

I would only give a card in that instance. I give 5-Dollar Shake personalised cards at weddings, especially if I'm not giving any money or a present. I very rarely give money.

DP& I have two evening only weddings coming up as guests of the brides. We've got to travel to both and stay over. I don't mind doing this as we've planned nice hotels & afternoon events round them so they're part of mini breaks, but I refused to contribute to the honeymoon funds as I've paid to attend, they're his friends that I don't really like, we're evening only and they had the same shit poem in their invites, begging for cash. DP agrees and is happy to pay for naice cards if I arrange.

Kisskiss · 23/04/2019 00:57

Mm think this evening do doesn’t sound that bad as at least it was an open bar..
the last colleagues evening do I went to was a full cash bar, (but we did get sausage rolls.). had driven 4 hours to get there and had to stay overnight at a hotel as well as it was in the middle of farmland.. so let’s just say my cash gift was reduced when I realised I also had to pay for my glass of wine..

TheSerenDipitY · 23/04/2019 01:36

i would suggest, that you give a "gift" in approximately equal value to what it cost them to host you , so 3 drinks? 10 pounds?
judging by the many stories on the internet of brides and grooms sending a note after the wedding saying "your gift value didnt even cover the cost of your meal, please send more"
that seems to be the etiquette of the day now

DSHathawayGivesMeFannyGallops · 23/04/2019 08:12

TheSerenDipitY - isn't that how "cancel the cheque" came to be? I can't believe that's a thing and not a one off grabby couple! Shock Are these stories mostly from the U.S.?

zingally · 23/04/2019 08:33

I was always taught, for an evening-only "do", any gift should be enough to cover the food and/or drink you consumed while there. £20 is acceptable, £30 is generous.

Saying that, I don't go to evening-only receptions any more. They are always for people I don't know brilliantly, like work colleagues, and don't hang out with apart from at work. They are always miles away, and I don't like driving in the dark, and there's often awkward sitting around while you wait for the meal to finish! They're boring, quite frankly.
Weddings are only tolerable if they're involving close family, or best friends. Any others are a chore.

HBStowe · 23/04/2019 08:50

I love how on these threads people always specific a ‘nice’ card, in case the OP might go out hunting for a shit one instead Grin

It sounds a bit crap OP but I would give them £30 and a bottle of champagne when they return to the office and then at least you’re saved the worry of whether or not you’ve been tight or snubbed anyone.

SauvingnonBlanketyBlanc · 23/04/2019 08:56

I would have got blotto on the free booze and ate crisps from the bar then got a massive take away(or drive thru) on the way home

ChicCroissant · 23/04/2019 08:57

Really unusual not to have food at an evening reception IME, no point in putting the budget into a free bar if the guests are too hungry to stay.

Hobbesmanc · 23/04/2019 09:22

It surprises me that a wedding venue didn't insist on some food being served. I'd be miffed if there wasn't a buffet or snacks served. Wasn't the cake passed round either?

I usually swerve evening do's unless they are local. If I attend I'd probs give 20-30 quid in vouchers

MrsCollinssettled · 23/04/2019 09:40

Why do people treat evening guests so poorly? I've lost count of the weddings I've been to where the wedding breakfast overran so the evening guests where hanging around waiting to be allowed in.

For mine I had the evening do in a separate location with a decent airgap to make sure this didn't happen. I also made sure the itinerary for the evening was in the invite so people knew when the b&g were arriving, when the meal was being served, cake cut etc. It's not difficult to give people that information with their invite (no matter how last minute) and then people can make their own minds up about whether it's worth going to the expense of attending and if they need to eat first.

The b&g could have put reception 7- midnight. We have a free bar. There are a number of restaurants locally - we recommend X or Y.

MrsCollinssettled · 23/04/2019 09:47

These days I would eat first and arrive a hour after the stated starting time if I didn't have any info about the evening do from the b&g.

NaturatintGoldenChestnut · 23/04/2019 11:47

Are these stories mostly from the U.S.?

Is there a particular reason you assume all rude, grabby CFers are from the US? And actually, no, cancel the cheque B&G were British.

This is an important lesson for you, OP: don't bother with evening do's if they aren't local.

I wouldn't give them a bean, a bottle of fizz.

BeanBag7 · 23/04/2019 12:36

Who ever said to give them £100 clearly has more money than sense. I wouldn't give more than £25 for a colleague's wedding, especially only as an evening guest.

Hollowvictory · 23/04/2019 12:41

It sounds dire but really nobody travels for hours and pays out for accommodation for an evening do for a colleague. You learned that the hard way.

DSHathawayGivesMeFannyGallops · 23/04/2019 14:50

Erm...I know "cancel the cheque" is British, it's from this forum and I read the thread Hmm. I really thought they were a one off.

You will find people like that everywhere but I see more online wedding horror stories like that from US than from UK- which is why I asked, although I think US is perhaps a little over represented online- so genuinely interested to know. I've not come across it in the UK. Lots of weddings in my wider social circle atm (late 20s/30s) and this is not mentioned as something others have seen or heard of at all. A lot of people I know still think it's pretty vulgar to ask for honeymoon money! My best friend got more gifts and less cheques than anticipated at her wedding!

Alconleigh · 23/04/2019 15:03

As a few other people have said, never travel for an evening invitation. They are always fairly rubbish, so I'd only contemplate if local.

And yes, snort to the £100. Give them a card. You've spent quite enough. Far more than the cost of your drinks!

LumpyPillow · 23/04/2019 15:20

A card and bottle between you.

'give enough to cover what you've consumed/eaten' as a gift is strange, too. Why? They chose to celebrate in this way and to invite you. Don't get swept up in thinking you 'owe' the bride/groom anything. 'weddings cost a lot of money don't you know!' well yes, and everything about it is a choice. They chose to invite you and you have spent more than enough money on attending, theres the gift.

NaturatintGoldenChestnut · 23/04/2019 15:29

You will find people like that everywhere but I see more online wedding horror stories like that from US than from UK- which is why I asked, although I think US is perhaps a little over represented online

They don't have evening-do's and two-tiered guests lists in the US. It's unheard of and people would find it gobsmackingly rude. If they cannot afford to have guests for all of it they scale back or alter the reception so everyone can come along.

DSHathawayGivesMeFannyGallops · 23/04/2019 16:46

Ok thank youSmile. I would like to think that behaviour is an extreme minority, regardless of origin. I personally find the more inclusive style you described much nicer tbh! I don't really like the idea of 2-tiered dos & we are only going to two because we have decided to make the weekends into mini-breaks, stay somewhere nice and enjoy things we want at the same time.

I also find the idea of "covering my place" mentioned by PP bizarre. Your wedding, your hospitality, your bill to foot. If you need to recoup costs per head off your guests, you need to scale back your wedding.

ConfCall · 23/04/2019 17:00

If I were invited as a B Lister, I’d only attend if local, or if loads of friends were going and it looked like being a real laugh. I’d give £20, or a bottle of decent wine.

PurpleCrazyHorse · 23/04/2019 17:00

Card and a bottle of wine on their return to work.

We've always eaten before an evening reception (or party), just to cover ourselves, even if it's a McDonalds and a bag of snacks.

I don't have a problem with an evening only invite (or a ceremony and evening invite) provided all the info needed is given and the event runs roughly to time. Nothing worse than arriving and the meal is still in full swing and there's no where to wait.

CantStopMeNow · 23/04/2019 17:25

Surely you realise by now that you were only invited so they would get an expensive gift/money off you?

After what it's cost you in travel and accommodation i wouldn't be spending anymore money on them.

NoSquirrels · 23/04/2019 17:29

The bar staff couldn't rustle up some sandwiches or bar snacks? Seems odd!

Just chalk it up to experience, and give them a nice(ish) bottle of fizz on return to the office.

NaturatintGoldenChestnut · 23/04/2019 17:33

The bar staff couldn't rustle up some sandwiches or bar snacks? Seems odd!

Many have no kitchen and/or no license to 'rustle' up food.