'A good story to tell': Fiona couldn't stop some in Nova Scotia from tying the knot
CBC
Some people in Nova Scotia took shelter as they prepared for last weekend's massive storm.
Others, however, got married.
Couples with weddings on the schedule had to choose what to do as Fiona made its approach.
Some rescheduled their nuptials, but others didn't.
Perris Clouthier, who spoke to CBC ahead of her wedding, said after over a year and a half of planning with her husband, Justin Clouthier, she quickly had to readjust her plans for her outdoor wedding when she heard about the storm.
She said she and her husband decided to go ahead with their plans, though, despite Fiona.
"It pretty much went as well as it could considering we had the hurricane," Clouthier said with a chuckle.
The reception and ceremony was held in Urbania, N.S., at the Shubenacadie Tidal Bore Rafting Resort, which lost power Friday night when the storm was at its worst, Clouthier said.
But the facility had generators, so the cabins where guests stayed had heat and water. The same couldn't be said for Clouthier's own cabin, which was without plumbing and heating.
Trees blocking the path into the resort had to be cut on the morning of the wedding to allow makeup artists and restaurant staff onto the property.
In the end, about 80 guests attended, Clouthier said.
"We had a generator going, and funnily enough, it went out in the middle of the reception," she said. "But one of my cousins had brought his own generator, and so we plugged that bad boy in and … we were able to keep the party going."
Justin Clouthier said he wasn't too concerned about the nuptials ahead of the storm and was happy to see things go ahead with little trouble.
"I'm just more glad that everyone was — first of all, safe — but they also managed to have a good time and at this point, it's just really good memories of getting married in a hurricane," he said.