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Wedding feasts bloom in May despite Rooster (China Daily) Updated: 2005-04-05 09:05
Spring fever and a weeklong holiday combine to make May a busy month for
wedding banquets - and this year is no exception even though it's considered an
inauspicious time to tie the knot.
 A Chinese couple walk past a wedding photograph poster at
an international wedding gown and photography equipment exhibition in
Shanghai on February 25, 2005.
[newsphoto.com.cn] |
In fact, the
crowds of couples lining up to schedule wedding feasts are so large that
Shanghai is facing a shortage of masters of ceremonies.
To fill the gap,
the Shanghai Wedding Trade Association had to launch an urgent training program
for new talent.
"We're training some 40 new hosts, who will undergo
examinations and start their jobs in May," said Huang Liping, secretary general
of the association.
At present, there are about 200 wedding service
agencies in the city, employing some 1,000 hosts.
And most companies are
reporting full schedules for May.
Cai Yong, a manager at Shanghai Iris
Wedding Agency, said that all the company's service teams have been booked for
weddings during the Labor Day holiday week, which starts on May 1, and every
Saturday and Sunday next month.
"May is always the best time for
weddings," Cai said. "On some days, we'll be handling as many as three
weddings."
Many hotels and restaurants also said their banquet halls will
be full in May. Henry Yang, who will hold his wedding banquet on May 7, said
the month is the best time for the ceremony.
"The weather is good, and
most of our friends and relatives will be free during the holiday. It's also a
good time to go for a honeymoon," said the 28-year-old trade company
clerk.
Like many young couples, Yang and his wife completed their
marriage registration before the start of the new lunar year on February 9.
Because of a quirk in the timing between the solar and lunar calendars, there is
no solar spring in the Year of the Rooster. Years without a spring are called
"widow years" and are considered a bad time to get married. But the superstition
applies only to the registration process.
So many young couples rushed
to register before the end of the last lunar year and scheduled their wedding
feasts for this year.
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