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.
Dexter Lake sits in the southern Adirondacks near the Great Sacandaga basin — a 35-acre water that holds the middle ground between the reservoir shoreline developments to the south and the deeper backcountry to the north. No public fish stocking records on file, which usually means limited access or private shoreline, though smaller lakes in this zone sometimes hold wild populations of perch or pickerel that never make it into DEC reports. The Great Sacandaga Lake region is a patchwork of private land, state forest, and old resort parcels; if you're planning a visit, confirm access before you drive. Check the DEC's public access database or contact the regional office in Northville for current status.
Dry Lake sits in the Great Sacandaga Lake region — a nine-acre water with no current fish stocking data and minimal public documentation, which usually means either private holdings or marginal access that keeps it off the day-trip circuit. The name suggests seasonal drawdown or shallow basin dynamics common to smaller waters in the southern Adirondacks, where summer levels can drop enough to expose mudflats by late August. Without maintained trails or DEC campsites in the immediate record, this one stays quiet by default. If you're poking around the Sacandaga backcountry with a topo map and patience, it's worth a look — but confirm access and water levels before committing to the hike.
Duck Lake is a 24-acre water in the Great Sacandaga basin — one of the small named lakes in a region better known for the big reservoir and its spiderweb of seasonal camps and private shoreline. No public DEC access or fish stocking records on file, which in this part of the Park usually means private shoreline or landlocked by camp roads. The name shows up on USGS quads but not in paddling guides — a placeholder for locals, not a destination. If you're looking for public water in the Sacandaga corridor, you're better off at Peck Lake or the state boat launches on the main reservoir.