Booneville Easter Egg Hunt Draws Families Despite Brief Rain Shower
Rain couldn't keep families away from Booneville's Easter Egg Hunt, which organizers called a huge success despite a pop-up shower mid-event.

Families from across Owsley County showed up Saturday for Booneville's annual Easter Egg Hunt, and a pop-up rain shower mid-event wasn't enough to chase them off. Organizers called the day a "huge success" and extended public thanks to the volunteers and sponsors who made it run.
The City of Booneville organized the hunt with backing from local civic groups and donors who covered prizes, supplies, and the full slate of activities. Volunteers handled the visible work: hiding eggs before families arrived, staffing activity stations, and keeping children fed and entertained while the weather moved through.
The public thank-you that follows the event each year carries practical weight. Naming sponsors and volunteers in print creates a documented record of community investment, one organizers can point to when applying for future grants or soliciting donations for similar gatherings. In a county where civic events compete for limited volunteer hours and modest local funding, a well-attended and well-credited Easter egg hunt is evidence of organizational capacity, not just holiday spirit.
Booneville, the county seat of Owsley County in eastern Kentucky, holds few large public gatherings between the cold months and summer programming, making the Easter Egg Hunt one of spring's more anticipated community markers. Events like it also give partnering organizations, including schools, churches, and health providers, a natural opening to connect with families and share information on services ranging from summer programs to community resources.
Saturday's shower tested the crowd's willingness to stay. They did, the children finished the hunt, and organizers packed up a successful day.
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