COVID threw one curveball after another at this P.E.I. couple, who finally wed in a hotel hallway - Action News
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COVID threw one curveball after another at this P.E.I. couple, who finally wed in a hotel hallway

Gerald and Terry Arsenault did a pandemic pivot of their own after COVID-19 undermined most of their wedding dreams.

'We've been planning it, and I just didn't want to go through all the planning again'

Gerald and Terry Arsenault got married at the Quality Inn Hotel on Dec. 31. (Sandy Champion/Submitted by Terry Arsenault)

Gerald and Terry Arsenault spent the past two years planningto tie the knot but COVID-19 got in the way again and again and again.

On Dec. 31,the Wellington, P.E.I. couplefinally got married in a hotel hallway.

Their wedding marked exactly two years from the day they wereengaged.Their expectations on New Year's Eve in2019, however, were considerably different from what the future had in store.

The original plan was to get married in 2020. COVID-19 scratched that idea.

The Arsenaultseventually picked the date of New Year's Eve in 2021, on the expectation that friends and family would be able to travel for a cosy wedding with the worst of the pandemic behind them.

Not on the invitation list: Omicron.

Withnew COVID-19 restrictions made a week and a half beforethe wedding date, the couple learned they could not hold a reception.

Travel restrictions also cancelled plans for some invitees, arrangements for a limo were scrubbedand even theircake could not be made, Terry Arsenault said.

Whether there were five people there or hundred people there, it didn't really matter as long as her and I were there.- Gerald Arsenault

"The cake couldn't be done because the lady went away, so coming back [meant]isolating, so she couldn't do it," she said.

In a pandemic pivot of their own, the couple scratched plans for a church wedding, and came up with a scaled-down strategy. They decided to marryin the hallway of the Quality Inn Hotel inSummerside, where they had stayed to prepare for their original wedding plans.

"The pastor showed up, we just directed him where to go, and we did it," Terry said.

"It turned out beautiful. I mean, people [who]were in the other rooms came out and [stood]beside their doors. The hotel was phenomenal they were being very accommodating to us."

Terry Arsenault's wedding day was not what she had imagined, but still became an event to remember. (Submitted by Terry Arsenault)

It was not the wedding scene they had envisioned. The couple hadspent most of the last year planning various details, and had invited family members from other provinces, Gerald said.

However, most of them were ruled out of attendance because of new isolation rules announced in December.

"[The government]announced that they would do the four-day isolation for anybody that came to the Island, even though everyone that was coming was double vaxxed," he said.

"Unfortunately, we only had one person that could meet that isolation criteria."

Newer restrictions, diminishing hopes

The couple seemed to lose hope, as COVID-19 cases on P.E.I. surged and restrictions became tighter,Gerald said.

The couple chose the hotel hallway because they didn't know what else might happen in the future,Gerald said.

"We had postponed it multiple times before, and it was just to the point like, what is the future going to be with the Omicron [variant]," he said.

"Whether there were five people there or hundred people there, it didn't really matter as long as her and I were there."

As for honeymoon plans, the couple will be spending it on the Island.

"We're hoping that we can go away from the cities, enjoy each other, shut everything down and spend a couple days together," Terry said.

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