Sections

Weather Forecast

Close

Baker -- Wulf

Heather Baker and Matthew Wulf were united in marriage May 26 at the Glacial Ridge Winery in Spicer.

Advertisement

The bride is the daughter of Rob and Jean Baker of Spicer. The groom is the son of Rick and Becky Wulf of Renville.

Maid of honor was Emily Baker, sister of the bride. Bride's attendants were Jana Christian, aunt of the bride; Chandra Ebbers, sister of the groom; and Laura Brown and Kenzie Goris, friends of the bride. Flower girls were Addyson Baker, daughter of the couple, and Peyton Ebbers, niece of the groom.

Best men were Adam Wulf and Aaron Wulf, brothers of the groom. Groom's attendants were Andrew Baker, brother of the bride, and Brian Fischer and Paul Beninga, friends of the groom.

Ushers were Mark Morris and Brenden Frie, friends of the groom.

A reception and dance were held at the Holiday Inn and Willmar Conference Center.

Following a wedding cruise to Jamaica and the Cayman Islands, the couple is living in Raymond. The bride is a nursing student at Ridgewater College in Willmar. The groom is employed by Fatty Daddy Auto in Willmar as an automotive technician and is a sergeant serving in the Minnesota National Guard.


Similar Articles

By Sam Cook, Duluth News Tribune Bill Hansen, who with his wife, Cindy, owns Sawbill Canoe Outfitters at the end of the road north of Tofte, experienced what he called ...

LITCHFIELD — The new Litchfield Community Built Playground project is entering its final days and people of all ages are invited to take part in Build Week activities. Volunteer shifts ...

Denny Dawson cuts the hair of Curt Palmer on Tuesday at his barbershop. Dawson, who is retiring, will close the store for good Thursday. He has operated the store in downtown Willmar for parts of the past six decades. Tribune photo by Gary Miller

 In this April 15, 2013 file photo, Sydney Corcoran, of Lowell, Mass. is tended to at the finish line of the Boston Marathon after two bombs exploded, in Boston. As people lay badly bleeding in the smoke of the Boston Marathon bombings, rescuers immediately turned to a millennia-old medical device to save their lives - the tourniquet. (AP Photo/The Boston Globe, John Tlumacki)

More from around the web: