Naomi and Tyler Wheeler have lived through a pandemic, wildfires, heat waves, minor earthquakes and most recently a post-tropical storm that laid waste to huge swaths of Atlantic Canada.
In front of just 16 guests, down from the 85 they'd hoped to entertain, the Wheelers professed their love for each other and exchanged rings at the Rodd Charlottetown hotel in the capital city’s downtown core.
“We tried to schedule it three times,” Naomi Wheeler said with a laugh. “And then COVID kept getting in the way. Of course, a hurricane happens when we reschedule.”
“There was the whole stages of grief about it,” Tyler Wheeler said. “We’re just kind of in disbelief that this could happen.”
“The flow is just a hurricane.”
The wedding was delayed by an hour-and-a-half while the officiant, Sarah Haberl, and the groom helped patch up a family member’s roof. The Wheelers first met as students at a 2013 party in Montreal. Later that evening, the pair recognized each other at a club where they had gone to act as “wing people” for friends.
“We were terrible wing people,” said the bride.
The room was lit with 30 candles and three iPhone flashlights. The invocation and vows were read by candlelight and a headlamp, Haberl said.
The rings the Wheelers eventually exchanged were first passed around the room so guests could offer a blessing on them.
The raspberry and vanilla swirl cake was topped with fresh flowers and made by the groom’s sister-in-law.
One of the first songs partygoers danced to was the well-known sea shanty ‘Barrett’s Privateers.’
“We had to get a little bit of Nova Scotia in there,” the groom said.
Reflecting on their ceremony and the past few whirlwind days, the bride said they didn’t realize how fast and how bad things could get with the weather. But Naomi Wheeler said she also feels overwhelmed by the amount of support she got and how everyone came together.
“I think we embraced it. It was a lovely, lovely, cosy, intimate evening,” she said. “I feel very loved.”