When life gives you a snow day, make a snowman.
Across the U.S. South, millions of residents woke up Friday to a rare chance to bust out the mittens and snow pants thanks to a cold snap that dumped snow in their parks, streets and backyards.
While the chilly conditions sparked warnings about treacherous icy roads and forced mass school cancellations, many stuck at home were determined to make the most of the heavy snowfall.
In Little Rock, Arkansas, Tyshae Sanders and her boyfriend, Terrell Bryant, decided to build an igloo in the front yard of their home, using a plastic bin to mold snow blocks for the structure. The goal was to build one 5 feet (about a meter and a half) tall by the end of the day.
''Why couldn't this happen when we was kids?'' Bryant, 34, said with a laugh.
''It could be more,'' Sanders, 30, said. ''I'm still wishing for a blizzard.''
In a hilly southeast Atlanta neighborhood, where 3 or 4 inches (about 7.6 to 10 centimeters) fell in the early morning, kids and some adults grabbed sleds and anything else that might slide. Like in much of the South, streets remained unplowed, and the few drivers who braved the snowy conditions crept along at cautious speeds.
''My first thought was, ‘Wow!''' Mikayla Johnson, 12, said of awakening to a blanket of white. ''We haven't had snow since I was, like, 4 — good snow, at least. So I was really happy.''