It was an easy clue. The Enjoy Centre was a favourite spot of the pair so there was little doubt where she was heading. She arrived for the noon reservation and was greeted by her mother and sister, who were in on Dylan’s plan. “We all knew what was happening but no one really said anything.”
Awkward? “Yes, now that I think about it. The conversation was a bit strange,” says Leanne.
At the end of the meal, a waitress handed Leanne an envelope, GPS coordinates and a note that referenced Olympic hero Michael Phelps. Again, she was certain where to go. “We met on Halloween through friends. He and his friends were dressed like the U.S. Olympic swim team.I knew that it was the pool.”
When she arrived at the Fountain ParkRecreation Centre in St. Albert, she opened the sealed letter as instructed. Inside, there was $200 and a note telling her to head to West Edmonton Mall to buy a special outfit for the evening. “Meet back at the house at four.”
Dressed in her new threads, Leanne returned to the house on time to find 10 family members waiting for her. The couple’s Boston terrier greeted her with a small key hanging from her collar. Leanne opened the box and found an engagement ring inside. Before Dylan even had the chance to go down on his knee and ask her to marry him, she shouted “Yes, Yes, Yes.”
Leanne and Dylan were married October 13, 2012.
Tracey Spencer and Tony Flath, Beaumont
Tracey Spencer’s reply when her husband-to-be Tony Flath proposed in a hot-air balloon ride over Edmonton in the summer of 2011?
“I didn’t even say yes. I told him that one day I would marry him.” “What kind of answer is that?” another balloon passenger asked.
“It’s not a ‘no,'” Tony said.
The pair had only been dating for 11 months when Tony popped the question. Tracey loved Tony and she did see a future with him, but what freaked her out was the thought of going through a wedding.