RNLI 'welly guard of honour' for newlyweds

News imageIan Foster Amber is wearing a white wedding dress and Alex Richardson is dressed in a black jacket and trousers, white shirt and black bow tie.
They are smiling and Amber is looking up at yellow wellies held aloft on boat oars as they walk through Looe RNLI’s yellow welly guard of honour. Crew members are wearing drysuits and red lifejackets and yellow helmets. Ian Foster
The Looe lifeboat crew surprised Amber and Alex with a distinctive guard of honour

Members of a lifeboat station surprised their newlywed crewmates with a guard of honour made up of oars and yellow wellies at their wedding.

As Amber and Alex Richardson tied the knot on a clifftop overlooking Millandreath Beach on Saturday, 10 of their crewmates hid in the background.

As the ceremony ended and the couple turned to enjoy the applause of family and friends, they were surprised by a guard of honour made up of RNLI crew, forming an arch using gig boat oars festooned with yellow wellies.

Amber said: "I caught a glimpse of a yellow welly on what appeared to be a pole in the air and then a red jacket before realising what was going on."

News imageIan Foster Alex and Amber are standing besides a rail smiling. They are wearing yellow and black kit with red life jackets and are holding white helmets with the letters RNLI in red.Ian Foster
The keen sailors were surprised by the RNLI guard of honour

The couple are both keen sailors with Looe Sailing Club and joined Looe RNLI as crew at around the same time.

Amber's father, Clive Palfrey, Looe RNLI's lifeboat operations manager, said how "proud" he was to see the crew marching down to form the arch and pull off the surprise - adding it was "an amazing Father's Day weekend".

Ian Foster, from the lifeboat station, said the crew were "delighted" to be a small part of the wedding.

He said: "Yellow wellies are synonymous with the RNLI, the iconic yellow welly forms part of the crew's safety equipment both for our shore crew and boat crew with their drysuits."

He said the yellow welly symbolised bravery, safety, and the charity's mission at sea.

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