Two "avid skiers" donned their skis and ski fits and tied the knot on a mountain in Peru, Vermont, earlier this month amid a bomb cyclone, Fox 35 Information reported.

In response to the station, 40-year-old Molly Healy and 48-year-old Matthew Gnoza had been married on March 12. The couple initially deliberate to be wed on the mountain's summit. Nonetheless, in gentle of the day's surprising "excessive winds and blizzard-like circumstances," the couple determined to say "I do" at a decrease elevation.

"We discovered a closed path that stuffed up properly with snow by means of that day and gave us simply sufficient safety tucked into the bushes," Healy informed Newsweek.

Earlier chatting with Fox 35, Healy stated: "We didn't anticipate the bomb cyclone. It was a wild experience that day."

Bomb cyclones are the results of a climate phenomenon generally known as bombogenesis.

"Bombogenesis takes place when a midlatitude cyclone turns into extra intense in a short time, normally over a 24-hour interval. This depth builds as a result of quickly dropping atmospheric strain," based on the Nationwide Climate Service, as Newsweek beforehand reported.

Because of the drop in strain, chilly and heat air might collide and in the end create a bomb cyclone, which may trigger numerous climate occasions comparable to snowstorms and heavy rain. In response to NBC Information, it is best to remain indoors throughout a bomb cyclone. Nonetheless, ought to somebody have to go exterior, it is crucial that they gown in heat layers and stroll fastidiously on the ice.

Healy informed Fox that neither she nor Gnoza is "heat climate" individuals. They each love "winter and snow and snowboarding," so getting married on skis atop a mountain amid a snowstorm "made good sense." In reality, Healy informed Newsweek that she and Gnoza met snowboarding and have spent "a lot of [their] five-year relationship on skis in all sorts of climate everywhere in the world."

"I stated in my vows that it was on hundreds of raise rides that I had the honour of attending to know Matt and falling in love with him," she stated, per Fox 35.

Regardless of the tough climate circumstances, Healy additionally informed Newsweek that the ceremony was "image good."

"We couldn't have deliberate it any higher ourselves," she stated.

Paradoxically, Healy and Gnoza aren't the primary to change vows throughout a serious climate occasion.

In January, Sally and Adam Irujo obtained married in Windfall, Rhode Island, amid "the fourth-largest snowstorm the town has ever recorded." After 14 months of marriage ceremony planning, the couple determined they weren't going to let a blizzard destroy their large day. So that they donned their cold-weather gear and marched to the Windfall Public Library, the place the ceremony was held.

"We thought it was going to be actually arduous and all of it got here collectively," stated Sally. "I believe it was simply meant to be."

Replace 03/23/22, 9:21 a.m. ET: This text has been up to date to incorporate feedback from Molly Healy, who additionally supplied a brand new photograph.

Molly and Matt Wedding
Two "avid skiers," Molly Healy and Matthew Gnoza, donned their skis and ski fits and tied the knot on a mountain in Peru, Vermont, earlier this month amid a bomb cyclone.Molly Healy/Supplied