Quartzsite Easter Egg Hunt Set for Town Park on April 4
Quartzsite families gathered at Town Park on April 4 for an Easter egg hunt with age-grouped searches and a golden egg prize reserved for early arrivals.

A golden egg prize reserved for early arrivals gave children an extra incentive to show up at Quartzsite's Town Park Baseball Field before the 10 a.m. start Saturday morning. The Town of Quartzsite held its Easter egg hunt on April 4, organizing participants into age groups for separate rounds of searching the day before Easter Sunday 2026.
The golden egg was designed to reward the earliest arrivals and encourage broad participation across age brackets. The event was listed on the Parker Regional Chamber events calendar and also promoted through the Quartzsite Elementary School District's community feed, reflecting institutional backing from both the chamber and local educators, who flagged the hunt as community enrichment for students and families during the holiday weekend.
The Saturday timing was deliberate. Scheduling the event the day before Easter allowed greater participation from area volunteers, seasonal RV visitors, and school-age children off for the holiday. Quartzsite's civic calendar depends heavily on that volunteer base, and the egg hunt served two audiences simultaneously: long-time residents and the snowbirds and day-trippers who pass through the small desert community each spring. Events like this one give short-term visitors a low-barrier way to engage with local life, and that foot traffic supports the businesses and community organizations that sustain the town through the summer months.
The event was free to attend. Organizers welcomed donations of plastic eggs or wrapped candy, and those interested in volunteering or seeking details about age-group divisions could reach the Town of Quartzsite offices at the contact number on the chamber's event page. Families were encouraged to arrive early to secure parking and complete check-in before the hunts began.
For Quartzsite's municipal leaders, attendance at events like this one carries weight beyond the holiday weekend. Strong turnout supports the case for parks and recreation funding and staffing, and a well-attended spring gathering typically becomes a recruiting ground for volunteer leaders who go on to organize summer fairs and fall markets. A poorly attended event, by contrast, can signal volunteer burnout and prompt a reassessment of scheduling or resource requests heading into the warmer season.
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