Back to Metroland's Home Page!
 Site Search
   Search Metroland.Net
 Classifieds
   View Classified Ads
   Place a Classified Ad
 Personals
   Online Personals
   Place A Print Ad
 Columns & Opinions
   Comment
   Looking Up
   Reckonings
   Opinion
   Letters
   Rapp On This
 News & Features
   Newsfront
   Features
   What a Week
   Loose Ends
 Lifestyles
   This Week's Review
   The Dining Guide
   Leftovers
   Scenery
   Tech Life
 Cinema & Video
   Weekly Reviews
   The Movie Schedule
 Music
   Listen Here
   Live
   Recordings
   Noteworthy
 Arts
   Theater
   Dance
   Art
   Classical
   Books
   Art Murmur
 Calendar
   Night & Day
   Event Listings
 AccuWeather
 About Metroland
   Where We Are
   Who We Are
   What We Do
   Work For Us
   Place An Ad
 

Thank You for My Honeymoon

Some couples prefer a week overseas to service for 20

By Miriam Axel-Lute

Wedding gifts used to serve a very specific purpose: getting young adults set up in their first household. But these days, as the average age of getting married drifts later and later, the choice facing many couples is which of their individual sets of dishes to give away, not what china pattern to put on their registry.

One thing few of us about to combine households have lying around, however, is a spare savings account marked “honeymoon.”

The solution? Create a honeymoon registry. A honeymoon registry is very similar to a traditional gift registry, except that well-wishers see options to buy items such as one night’s stay at a B&B, a massage at the hotel spa, a whale-watching cruise, or dinner at a specific restaurant. They can also contribute toward plane fare or give cash earmarked for a night on the town. Although it basically works out to gifts of cash, a honeymoon registry employs a tactic well known to charities: People feel much better giving cash when it is earmarked for something specific.

For a couple, a honeymoon registry has a few distinct advantages and disadvantages. On the upside, it makes you plan your honeymoon in advance. I, for one, had no idea that nearly all the B&Bs in Vancouver would be booked through the fall by the previous February. If I hadn’t been gathering information then so I could put specifics onto our honeymoon registry, we might have found ourselves staying in a tacky motel instead of snagging the last open suite in a B&B a few blocks from one of the city’s coolest neighborhoods.

On the other hand, with a regular registry, if you don’t get that expensive crystal it’s no skin off your bank account. But much of your honeymoon needs to be committed to in advance, especially plane fare, lodging, and any in-demand special events. The safest way to go about it is to save enough, or nearly enough, for a very bare bones trip, and then let the generosity of your guests layer on all the fun details. If you need to rely on your guests to make it happen at all, you may need to set a gift deadline well in advance of the wedding (and send reminders) to know whether it’s a go, or—safer for those with last-minute friends—schedule the honeymoon for a few months after the wedding.

Of course it can end up working out better than expected: Suzanne and Pete, a Capital Region couple, were able to extend their honeymoon an extra five days once they saw how many gifts they’d gotten.

There’s a wide range of options for how to go about creating the registry itself. Dozens of Web sites are devoted specifically to honeymoon registries: Some are through travel agents or hotel chains, others are independent. They accept credit cards, keep track of the balance, and send you one big check and a list of addresses for thank-you notes.

These registries are convenient for you and your gift givers, but be sure you read the fine print. Many charge a service fee of 7 to 10 percent on the gifts received. Others require that you book your travel through them, often at inflated prices. A CNN reporter found one site that charged twice as much for a beach barhopping tour through the registry as it cost to sign up for the tour directly. On some services, the gifts expire after a certain amount of time. On others, especially the hotel-sponsored ones, your guests can buy you only the services offered through the site, so you can’t tack on local restaurants or open-ended items or create a multiple-location trip.

If the official registries don’t work for you, you can also create a DIY honeymoon registry using one of the (truly) free registry web sites. This is what we did. To do this, find a trusted friend or family member to be your banker and direct gift givers to mail checks to that person or make transfers to her Paypal account. She can give you the one big check and a list of who sent what. Or you can skip this step and just collect the checks yourself, since, as we found, even if you do assign a banker, some large portion of your guests will just stick their checks inside their cards and bring them to the ceremony anyway.

Once you’ve got your method, it’s time for the good part: Plan your honeymoon! Don’t forget to include the basics: travel (including airport parking, cabs, public-transit passes, and car rentals) and lodging (including estimated taxes and tips). You can break down large expenses like plane fare into 10 or 20 smaller gifts. (A great way to have a greener honeymoon is to throw in the option for someone to buy you carbon offsets for your flights. Bonus points if you can guess ahead of time who among your guests will actually buy them.)

Now add in the fun stuff. Show tickets, museum admissions, tours, spa treatments, and kayak rentals are all fair game (but make sure you can fit it all in or extend your stay if everyone comes through). Throw out a couple specific restaurants that look interesting, but also leave some of your meals open ended (“$50 for dinner after the show” or “Send us to dinner at your favorite restaurant in London”). Include links in your descriptions when you can and explain why things interest you: The more your guests feel like they’re taking a vicarious trip through reading about your plans, the more they will feel like they’ve actually participated in choosing a meaningful gift for you.

Finally, once you’re on the trip of your dreams, keep your camera at the ready and be sure to snap a picture of each item someone paid for so you can throw an appropriate picture or two in each thank-you card.

 

>> Back To Wedding Guide


Send A Letter to Our Editor
Back Home
   

 
 
Copyright © 2002 Lou Communications, Inc., 419 Madison Ave., Albany, NY 12210. All rights reserved.