Every named lake, pond, river, and stream worth fishing in the Adirondack Park — with the species you'll find, the access you can count on, and the regions they sit in.
Beaver Lake is an 18-acre water in the Tupper Lake region — small enough to feel secluded, large enough to paddle without circling back on yourself in ten minutes. No fish species data on file with DEC, which usually means light stocking history and catch reports too sparse to register, though beaver ponds and their flowages often hold brookies that move in from feeder streams. The name is taxonomic — beaver activity shapes the shoreline and water levels here, as it does across much of the northwest Adirondacks where low-gradient drainages and alder thickets create ideal habitat. Best approached as a quiet-water paddle or a bushwhack objective rather than a fishing destination with known returns.