Peninsula Trail, Bill Williams River National Wildlife Refuge, Lake Havasu, AZ

The Peninsula Trail at the Bill Williams River National Wildlife Refuge is located on a manmade spit of land about a mile long that juts into Lake Havasu between Parker Dam and the mouth of the Bill Williams River. Recreational amenities include benches, shade structures, fully-accessible fishing piers with solar-powered lighting (for night fishing), a canoe/kayak launch area and an outdoor environmental education area.
EDA designed and fabricated the interpretive panels for the trail, a project that was funded by the Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Lake Havasu Fisheries Improvement Project, Metropolitan Water District of Los Angeles, Central Arizona Project and the Bureau of Land Management.

Interpretive themes and topics include enhancement of fish habitat, purpose and function of Lake Havasu and Parker Dam, management of the Lower Colorado River, threatened and endangered wildlife species and the ecology of riparian willow-cottonwood forests and upland desert biomes.