TRAVEL TALES
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Herb Kostlan and Donna Pennington sent in a vacation picture that
looked, sure enough, like nothing more than a picture from their
vacation.
Kostlan is wearing a white shirt patterned with slender leaves.
Pennington is wearing a white spaghetti-strapped dress with a white pearl
necklace and a wreath atop her head. They’re both wearing leis, holding
different ends of the Daily Pilot and smiling. They even look giddy --
like newlyweds.
During a trip to Wailea, Maui early last month, the two 65-year-olds
got married on the beach. Few people came to the ceremony -- just
Pennington’s three children, sister and brother in law -- but with the
ocean before them and a Hawaiian sky above them, the Balboa Island
residents indulged in a fairy-tale wedding resembling, in near-fictional
details, the way they met.
It was a blind date two years ago, Kostlan said, but if you hear him
out, it becomes clear that the blindness was one-sided. The two Southern
California natives first met in the fifth grade in Pasadena. They were
playmates and neighbors, growing up together until the 10th grade.
Each went their way, each got married, Pennington became widowed and
Kostlan got divorced.
Two years ago, a mutual friend fixed them up on what was said to be a
“blind date.” Kostlan got the details, though, and knew he was about to
meet a friend from his youth. Pennington found out during the evening.
“He was my best friend’s boyfriend,” Pennington said. “I called her
the next day to tell her she wouldn’t believe who I got fixed up with
last night. I got her permission to date him.”
A year and a half ago, after only six months of re-knowing each other,
Kostlan proposed to Pennington during a trip to Hawaii.
On Sept. 6, they got married. Four days later, they started their
honeymoon in -- of course -- Hawaii. The next morning, Sept. 11, they
awoke to news of terrorists attacking the East Coast.
What struck Kostlan, within this mournful mind-set, was the innocence
of the islands.
“Especially, in light of the heavy heart we had on our honeymoon,” he
said.
They stayed in Hawaii longer than they intended as flight conflicts
arose after Sept. 11, but neither can complain.
“If the good Lord blesses you and you live as long as we have, he can
bless you,” a still giddy Kostlan said.
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to Travel Tales, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail [email protected]; or fax to
(949) 646-4170.
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