The Only 2 Saturdays Available to a Southern Bride
It's hard being a Southern bride and choosing your wedding date. Especially when there are only two weekends you can pick to get married. Find out why!
Southern brides may stress about the 10 or more bridesmaids to include in their wedding (and the groomsmen too, of course!), but the choosing of a wedding date is far harder than the choosing of bridesmaids. This is where the big trouble and stress begins.Β
Engaged couples know that itβs not just your calendar you have to juggle when planning your wedding date, itβs all your bridesmaidsβ schedules, groomsmenβs schedules, friendsβ weddings, and trying to avoid Motherβs Day, Fatherβs Day, Fourth of July, Halloween, Thanksgiving, MLK Weekend, Presidentβs Day Weekend, and very likely Labor Day and Memorial Day. Oh, and there are all the religious holidays to contend with as well. Yes, the calendar starts to get limited quickly. At this point, weβve eliminated 13 of 52 possible weekends. But, there are still more dates to avoid. Β
For everyone who is in disagreement on those long holiday weekends being not-ideal for a wedding date, remember that airfare and hotel rates are typically elevated for those weekends. There are also plenty of recurring family get togethers over 3-day holiday weekends, so a wedding may interfere with these intimate annual events. Aunt Mary Sue will be talking about you behind your back if you choose one of these weekends. Just sayinβ.

And yes, while typically a couple is choosing the wedding date together, we all know that typically the bride is the one with the most concern here. So, weβll make the assumption for this article that this is the bride navigating these choppy waters.
As most brides are choosing a date a year in advance, they may not know the upcoming SEC or ACC football schedule. But, oh my. If a Southern bride picks the same weekend as the Florida vs Georgia game, or the LSU vs Alabama game β¦ itβs bad. Many other such rivalry games exist, so for this reason, many Southern brides will simply elect not to wed in September through November. If this sounds extreme, you do not understand the South and football.
But, then there are football playoffs and bowl games β¦ and duck season. As most of the month of January is open for duck hunting, letβs just eliminate from September to February 1.Β
At this point, weβre down 34 weekends that are off limits. But, that leaves 18 weekends that work right? Β
Not so fast. Β
There is also March Madness to contend with, so go ahead and mark off the last two weekends in March as well as the first weekend in April. But, Easter and Palm Sunday may overlap with March Madness on some years, so letβs just call this two weekends down instead of three down, to be fair.
And, you canβt get married on The Mastersβ weekend. No, maβam! Down one more weekend.
Oh, I certainly hope you or your betrothed are not accountants. If you are, letβs eliminate all of March through April 15 because you simply canβt get married in tax season, right? That would eliminate another three weekends from the already crowded March Madness/Passover/Easter/Palm Sunday/Masters season.
Weβre now down to 15 weekends that are available, but only 12 if yβall are accountants. Β
February is looking mighty fine. But, February is the trickiest month for weather. And by βweatherβ in the South, we mean ice. So, letβs eliminate that month. As weβve already accounted for Presidentβs Day weekend, thatβs only three more weekends to eliminate.
12 weekends left for the non-accountants. Okay, accountants, you are good at math. Weβre eliminating you from this tally, but keep up, alright? You are at nine at this point.
For conversationβs sake, letβs assume you are NOT getting married on the coast. Because β¦ hurricane season. That would eliminate all of the summer. But, if you are getting married on the coast, remember that hurricane season starts June 1.Β
Letβs also consider some big events that friends may be attending. For example, Derby is a big ole Southern thing that many need to work around.
Then, youβll want to avoid your birthdays and your siblingsβ birthdays, anniversaries and expected due dates for relatives or close friends. Letβs assume, conservatively, that with all of these obstacles, that means you should knock out three more weekends. Β
This brings us down to nine weekends left. Β
Now, you are likely to be navigating a graduation or two, and if you are getting married in your hometown, graduations mean filled hotel rooms. Or, if you have a weekend with a large event in your city, like Nashvilleβs Music City Marathon or Memphisβ Jazz Festival or Oxfordβs Double Decker Arts Festival, itβs harder to find venues and hotel rooms. Letβs assume your city has at least three weekends unique to your city that youβll want to avoid. And, letβs say one graduation weekend. That means four more weekends to eliminate.
This brings us down to five weekends left and 47 eliminated. Β
If either of yaβll are turkey hunters, a lot of April and May may be off the table. The good thing is we can assume these dates fall over the already mentioned holiday/Masters/tax season/city-specific events/graduation dates. So, weβll call this one a draw and keep our tally where it is. Five weekends left.
And, with your bridesmaids and the groomsmen, weβre going to assume there are at least two of these weekends that donβt work. Β
There you have it. You have three weekends to choose from to get married and they are likely going to fall in the spring or summer. Oh, July and August weddings in the South can be really hot β¦ and school is starting back up in August making it hard for many parents. Β
Letβs eliminate August. Β
Youβve likely already eliminated a couple of weekends in August at this point, so letβs just eliminate one more weekend for this count.
You have TWO weekends left to plan your wedding. Β
Next, bring these dates to your favorite venue and caterer and photographer and see if they are available. Β
And thus, Bridezilla is born. Β
Maybe just hire the wedding planner and blame it all on them? Β
Good luck, Southern Brides!Β
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Thank you to Amos Gott, of AmosEvents, for weighing in as our expert help!
We are also looking forward to authors Mary Huddleston and Asher Fogle Paulβs novel, βWithout a Hitchβ available for pre-order now. Described as βSweet Home Alabama meets Crazy Rich Asians meets The Devil Wears Prada in this hilarious romp through the world of extravagant Southern weddingsβ we are sure that that the missteps of wedding dates are only a fraction of what will be discussed. Pre-order now for December delivery.
Liza Graves
As CEO of StyleBlueprint, Liza also regularly writes for SB. Most of her writing is now found in the recipe archives as cooking is her stress relief!