Tornado lifts wedding to media heights

Caleb and Candra Pence pose for a wedding photo as a tornado swirls in the background after they were married Saturday in Harper County, Kan.
Caleb and Candra Pence pose for a wedding photo as a tornado swirls in the background after they were married Saturday in Harper County, Kan.

— On the plains of central Kansas, tornadoes are so unremarkable that wedding guests barely flinched as a couple exchanged their vows while a twister loomed in the distance.

But for people living outside Tornado Alley, Caleb and Candra Pence’s wedding Saturday is generating the kind of buzz usually reserved for celebrity nuptials. The video of the service has gone viral, garnering more than 20,000 views on You-Tube and a flurry of media coverage.

“It is amazing how fast it has taken off,” said the groom’s uncle, Lee Pence, who shot the video.

After Saturday’s outdoor service on the groom’s family farm near the small south-central Kansas town of Harper, the couple posed for photos with the twister visible behind them. The pictures capture them smiling — the 21-year-old bride in a white gown and the 22-year-old groom in a cowboy hat and jeans.

About 8 to 10 miles away, the twister was damaging a farm and wind turbines. The National Weather Service has classified it as an EF3 storm, packing winds of 138 to 167 miles per hour.

“I don’t know how on earth I will ever top this,” said wedding photographer Cate Eighmey, who said she posed the pair for dramatic shots of the newlyweds and the twister behind them. Eighmey’s photo shows what appears to be a second funnel dropping down from the cloud.

The couple has spent their honeymoon in Wyoming fielding media calls. Reached on his cell phone by The Associated Press, Caleb Pence recalled seeing the wall cloud forming as the service was about to begin. But with tornadoes a routine occurrence, the storm was the least of his worries.

“I had my mind on marrying my now wife,” said Caleb Pence.

His bride, a native of northeast Nebraska who had never seen a tornado before, was much less at ease. He said that when he told her what was happening, she responded, “I don’t want to hear it right now.”’

Some of the guests who filled the 250 folding chairs checked weather reports on their cell phones. But otherwise, the 20-minute service wasn’t altered.

Afterward, the couple, who met at a rodeo, made a dramatic horseback ride to the metal farm building that had been transformed into the reception site. They scarcely got inside when the skies opened up and poured down rain. The party didn’t end until after midnight.

“I don’t know how we did it,” Caleb Pence said. “It boggles my mind how perfect it worked.”

Front Section, Pages 10 on 05/25/2012

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