How about a Green Wedding

September 26th, 2010

Green Weddings are getting more thought these days as we all try to do our bit for the world we live in.
Here is an interesting article by guest writer Lucy E. Thomason, Thanks Lucy.

7 easy tips to ‘green up’ your wedding day, a genuine story from an Ann Arbor couple

Did you know that an Ann Arbor couple ‘greened’ up their wedding ceremony and you simply could do it too?

It was in August 2010, the Ann Arbor couple (Engel and Dyer) were married in a “green” outdoor wedding ceremony and reception near the Huron River fit to pay homage to their shared passion of the ecosystem and the outdoors.

The trend toward green weddings certainly isn’t new, but professionals say it has evolved to allow lovers to incorporate their very own personal preferences and still afford their special day.

Most people are curious about a green wedding and when they hear about what it really entails, they turn out going a different route. Our heroes Engel and Dyer made the decision they wouldn’t be able to keep everything completely green, but were going to try their hardest. And the most essential element was to make the day instructional as well as fun for guests.

They organized the wedding ceremony at a science and nature center where tours were offered to guests in the hour before they walked down the aisle. The tour featured different water and energy conservation systems used at the center like the solar-panel arrays for electricity, solar-powered heating and water heater systems and no-flush compost toilets.

The couple also focused on little details they said make a big difference.

- Dyer wore an heirloom – a vintage green dress that had been her great-grandmother’s in the 1930′s.
- Her ring was made with recycled gold and had a beryl stone instead of a diamond.
- Her makeup was certified organic.
- Guests were given local lavender buds – rather than sachets of rice – to throw in celebration.
- Tables were covered with local wildflowers and locally sourced foods.
- Leftovers and unused food were recycled (by sending to local farms) or reused.
- They found a generator which was solar powered and able to produce enough power to run the lights and the audio system they needed for the rock band.

For all their efforts, they still made some choices they knew weren’t the most eco-friendly options.

While they served Michigan white wine beverages and a Michigan sparkling cider, they couldn’t find a red from the state they liked. So they decided to have a dark wine from the U.S. for that option. And they could’ve gone with Internet invitations rather than printing and mailing invitations, but Dyer said she felt paper invitations were important – on recycled paper, of course.

So you? What can You do to ‘green up’ your ceremony day?

While green weddings are becoming more common, planning and pulling off the event is not as easy as one may think.

Sorting through claims of environmentally friendliness when shopping in the current marketplace is a big enough problem for normal purchases, let alone for such an emotionally charged and personal event as a wedding.

The best way to reduce the impact of an event is to perform a life cycle analysis on different elements of the marriage. For instance, where is that food coming from, how much energy is expended to produce it, how does it get to your plate and where do the leftovers go?

While meat typically takes more energy to produce than fruits and vegetables, considering how far some vegetables and fruit need to travel might let them have a larger carbon footprint.

The best way to reduce an event’s carbon footprint is to cut back on the number of guests invited. Fewer guests mean fewer meals, fewer needs for centerpieces and other decor and fewer miles traveled to reach the marriage.
About the writer – Lucy E. Thomason posts articles for the event planning jobs blog, her personal hobby website focused on suggestions to help people learn to organize a green event to spend less energy and reduce carbon footprints.

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