Animal weddings around the world

A wedding is one of the most important and special moments in one's life, even if it is a wedding for animals.Sounds outlandish? But they do happen around the world. Like Dogs barked "I do" in Peru, as canine companions were given the chance to marry any pooch who peked their fancy.

 

Dogs Get Married In Lima, Peru

Dogs barked "I do" in Peru, as canine companions were given the chance to marry any pooch who peked their fancy. As dog is your witness, these pooches sealed their union with a kiss , as owners carried their critters up to the altar. The dogs were given a marriage certificate for declaring such commitment, with each pooch pressing an inky paw onto a piece of paper.


Yorkshire Terriers Wed In Brazil

A pair of Brazilian dog lovers have spent almost £6,000 on a lavish wedding for their pet Yorkshire Terriers. Surrounded by more than 200 dog-lovers and their pooches, the bride Bruna, 5, and her two-year-old groom Lui barked their vows before planting their paws on the official registry documents. Then it was time to pose for photographs in front of a right dog's dinner: the cake specially made of canine food. Such a feast risked ruining the bride's custom-made £270 wedding dress and the groom's elegant tuxedo after the ceremony, which was held at a pet shop in the Barra da Tijuca neighbourhood in Rio de Janeiro. Bruna's owner Raquel Mendes admitted to ulterior motives while planning their honeymoon.


 

Sacred cow Ganga and marries Prakash the bull

A cow and a bull have been married off in a lavish Indian wedding - costing £10,000. More than 5,000 villagers turned up to watch sacred cow Ganga and Prakash get hitched during the Hindu ceremony held near Indore in Madya Pradesh. The nuptials were organised by Ganga's guardian, Gopal Patwari, to save the state's harvest from a 'natural disaster'.According to Mr Patwari: 'Natural calamities like hailstorms and heavy rain occurred in nearby areas, destroying their crops,' he said. 'To prevent this from happening to our villages we organised this wedding on the advice of Sadhus and holy men. 'We have been told this will maintain peace in our village.'


 

Indian woman marries cobra in Hindu wedding

A woman who fell in love with a snake has married the reptile at a traditional Hindu wedding celebrated by 2,000 guests in India's Orissa state, reports said. Bimbala Das wore a silk saree for the ceremony Wednesday at Atala village near the Orissa state capital Bhubaneswar. Priests chanted mantras to seal the union, but the snake failed to come out of a nearby ant hill where it lives, the Press Trust of India (PTI) said on Friday. A brass replica snake stood in for the hesitant groom. "Though snakes cannot speak nor understand, we communicate in a peculiar way," Das, 30, told the agency. "Whenever I put milk near the ant hill where the cobra lives, it always comes out to drink. "I always get to see it every time I go near the ant hill. It has never harmed me," she added. Villagers welcomed the wedding in the belief it would bring good fortune and laid on a feast for the big day. Snakes and particularly the King Cobra are venerated in India as religious symbols worn by Lord Shiva, the god of destruction.


A queer 'must have' for newly-weds

Whenever there’s a marriage in Mangal thanda where 40-odd tribal families live, the residents ensure that the newly married couple is first given an old truck tube. It is their life-jacket, so to say, with the help of which they cross the stream, Vattevagu, to buy their essential commodities. This tiny tribal hamlet is located 12 km from Nekkanda railway station and has no villages adjacent to it. For all practical purposes, they have to go to Suripelli village for their needs, which is divided by the Vattevagu stream.


Villagers hold frog wedding to end drought

I now pronounce you frog and wife. With five priests chanting scriptures, a frog groom named Punarvasu and his amphibian bride Pushala were joined in holy Hindu matrimony by villagers hoping the ancient custom will bring monsoon rains to their drought-stricken district. Organizer Nandkumar Pawar says thousands of people gathered Thursday in a massive tent in Patkhal village for the lavish wedding banquet. He said Saturday that the frogs were decorated with flowers and smeared with turmeric, a holy and auspicious ointment. A brass band played Bollywood film songs while the priests blessed the frogs. The region in Maharashtra state is 400 kilometres southeast of Mumbai, India’s financial capital. Frog weddings are practiced in some parts of India and other areas of South Asia.

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