Nova Scotia

Public Gardens proposal couple shares their romance

If you walked by the Public Gardens in Halifax Monday night or Tuesday morning, you might have noticed giant letters spelling out "Will you marry me."

'Samantha said you have to put effort into it, or I’m saying no,' groom-to-be says

Rob Jeffrey reads his proposal poem to Samantha Rideout. She said yes. (CBC)

A Halifax man whose romantic proposal to his girlfriend caught the public imagination says she told him he had to come up with a good pitch.

People walking by the Public Gardens on Monday and Tuesday saw giant letters spelling out "Will U marry me?" Each letter had a rose and a poem. 

I was a little suspicious when he picked me up from work in a suit.- Bride-to-be Samantha Rideout

CBC asked you who the couple was, and we quickly found Rob Jeffery and Samantha Rideout — soon to be Samantha Jeffery. 

“Samantha said you have to put effort into it, or I’m saying no,” Jeffery said of their previous discussions of marriage. 

The pair met for their first date outside the Public Gardens, right where the posters started. It’s become a favourite spot.

So Jeffery made up the signs, wrote the poems, and attached them to the garden gates. He picked Rideout up at work Monday and brought her to the gates. 

“I was dressed up and she — she’s always dressed up and looking beautiful,” he said.

He walked her along the signs and at the last one he dropped to one knee and asked her to marry him.

“He had a really sweet speech. I cried. I’m excited,” Rideout said. “I pretty much knew at the ‘W’. I was a little suspicious when he picked me up from work in a suit.”

She said the fact that people were honking encouragement as he popped the question added to the mood. “But when he was down on one knee, it didn’t feel like we were in public at all. It felt like it was just us.”

The Public Gardens said they’d leave the signs up today out of respect for the young couple. They're getting married Oct. 18 in Rideout's hometown of St. John's, N.L.