When news of Donald Trump’s 17-day sabbatical broke, the president, who often berated Barack Obama on Twitter for taking time off from work, was quick to point out that this was definitely not, and by no means, a vacation. “Working in Bedminster, N.J., as long planned construction is being done at the White House,” he tweeted on Saturday. “This is not a vacation - meetings and calls!” Bedminster, coincidentally, is also home to the Bedminster Trump National Golf Course, and Trump couldn’t resist taking a turn around the green to crash a wedding that was being held there on Saturday.

This isn’t the first time Trump has done this. He makes a habit of crashing weddings that are being held at his clubs if he also happens to be staying there, which has raised eyebrows among ethics experts who are incensed that Trump is promoting his own businesses with the weight of the presidency behind him.

In this weekend’s performance, Trump can be heard on video asking if his staff were doing a good job for all the guests at the wedding. Trump’s 17-day trip has been met with a ton of criticism from those who believe it’s inappropriate for the president to take such a lengthy break from office, especially during the convergence of the Russia investigation gaining steam and the looming threat from North Korea. Trump has already spent four weekends at his New Jersey club since arriving in office — so often that some have taken to calling it “Camp David North.”

In February, Trump retold the story of when he cajoled Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe into stopping by a wedding at Mar-a-Lago. “I said, ‘Come on, Shinzo, lets go over and say hello,‘” Trump reportedly said. “They’ve been members of this club for a long time. They’ve paid me a fortune.”