Loved-up Couples Find Extreme Ways To Tie The Knot

WALKING up the aisle was too dull for these brides who decided to tie the knot in madcap places.
Wedding, couple, bride, nakedAU NATUREL: Aussies Shelley and Josh tie the knot in the nude [CATERS]
Growing numbers of couples worldwide are making their big day unforgettable with wacky wedding ceremonies.
Underwater, at the end of a bungee rope and at the North Pole are among the extreme locations chosen for the nuptials.
Other couples have got hitched stark naked while one daredevil pair performed the ceremony on a tiny ledge thousands of feet up a rock.
The bride and groom showed no nerves when they wed at the summit of the 7,000ft Lost Arrow Spire in Yosemite National Park, USA.
Bungee, wedding, NUP-SIDE DOWN: Sandra and Jeroen leap into marriage [CATERS]
And the feat was not over once they had tied the knot, as the bride had to get off the perilous pinnacle by traversing a rope line in her dress.
Another loved-up pair, Sandra Eens and Jeroen Kippers, also had a head for heights.
The Belgian couple, both 30, claimed to be the first in the world to take a bungee jump in the middle of their wedding ceremony.
After being married on a platform 150ft up, they leapt off it in full wedding regalia before kissing upside down at the bottom of the drop.
Meanwhile, Norwegian explorer Borge Ousland, 49, made sure of a white wedding by whisking his fi ancée Hege to the North Pole.
The wedding was witnessed by a party of 15 - including the best man, bridesmaid and a helicopter crew.
Underwater, weddingALL AT SEA: Mexican couple tie the knot underwater [CATERS]
Also joining the craze is bride Shelley Davie and bridegroom Josh Hughes.
The couple showed each other they had nothing to hide by tying the knot naked in Melbourne, Australia.
Wacky weddings have become so popular that one company specialises in providing sub-aqua ceremonies for couples who want to take the plunge.
The firm, based in Mexico, offers the scuba weddings at £750 a pop – including equipment and photography.
And instead of bubbly, newlyweds celebrate with bubbles. A Daily Star report.

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