Funeral Planning
Let us help you with the necessary steps when a loved one passes away, from the simplest early considerations to the final full event.
People often confuse not having traditional earth burial as not having a funeral. Even if a family chooses cremation over traditional earth burial, they can still have a meaningful memorial service.
Traditionally, a burial service involves a visitation, followed by a funeral service in a church, or other place of worship. Family or religious traditions are often a factor for choosing burial. Decisions need to be made on whether the body needs to be embalmed, what kind of casket to use, what cemetery to use and what to put on the gravestone.
Reasons For Choosing Burial:
Burial is traditional within your family, religious group, or geographical area.
You do not like the idea of the body being “burned”
You prefer to have the body slowly return to the elements.
You want to erect a monument on the grave
Perhaps you want to visit the grave in the days to come, and you find a graveyard more appealing than say, a columbarium.
Cemetery Types:
Monumental cemetery is the traditional style of cemetery where headstones or other monuments made of marble or granite rise vertically above the ground.
Lawn cemetery is where each grave is marked with a small commemorative plaque that is placed horizontally at the head of the grave at ground-level.
Mausoleum is an external free-standing building constructed as a monument enclosing the interment space or burial chamber of a deceased person or people.
Columbarium walls are generally reserved for cremated remains.
Natural cemeteries also known as eco-cemeteries or green cemeteries is a new style of cemetery set aside for natural burials. Natural burials are motivated by the desire to be environmentally conscience, although natural burials can be performed at any type of cemetery, they are usually done in a natural woodland area.