Walking in a winter wonderland is supposed to enjoyed closer to Christmas than Easter, but on Monday Shelby Countians got their first chance of the season.
The National Weather Service reported amounts of 5 to 6 inches across Shelby County from an overnight snowfall, the maximum recorded in any county, although some readers displayed rulers in snow that pushed 7 inches in depth.
Doubtless some early blooms were confused as they tried to poke their heads through the snow to take advantage of the sunshine that followed.
If your birthday rolls around only once every four years, it could make you feel like taking a giant leap into your birthday cake, right?
At least that’s the sort of unusual response some of you tell us about your birthday being today, Feb. 29, and quite a few of you responded to our call on The Sentinel-News’Facebook page.
The U.S. Census Bureau says you are among 205,000 people in the U.S. who will share this birthday.
Most of you seem to have pretty fond feelings about your uniqueness.
Dance instructor Bob Devers changes the CD in the stereo, and about 20 people line up and start dancing to the Fat Joe and Nelly hit "Get It Poppin'."
Not a song you would expect to hear in a line-dancing class.
It's not just rap music, but pop, country and oldies tunes fill the space reserved for the class at the Family Activity Center at Clear Creek Park in Shelbyville on Friday evenings.
One of the participants, Alma Clark, said she has been line dancing for 20 years.
Celebrations in Shelby County this long weekend recapped how Martin Luther King Jr. led the country during a difficult time of progress. But those same celebrations served as a prompt to those in attendance that King's work is far from finished.
"Ultimately his message was one of change in America," said DeVone Holt, who spoke at the first Whitney M. Young Job Corps Educational event and basketball tournament. "He wanted to change how white America looked at black America and how black America looked at white America.
Kerri Richardson and Shelley Catharine Johnson have a lot in common.
Both are media spokespersons for high profile government offices, the governor and the attorney general, respectively.
Both are dedicated, driven professionals in their fields.
Both are also Shelby County residents.
Richardson, communications director for Gov. Steve Beshear, and Johnson, deputy communications director for Attorney General Jack Conway, say they have always gotten along well when their paths have crossed professionally from time to time.
The passing in 2011 of four men who showed their love for Shelby County in a variety of ways – with public service and determined legacies – left significant gaps in the foundation of the community.
All of them served in their unique ways, but perhaps none of them expanded the imprint of Shelby County more than Clarence Miller, who died in August at the age of 98.