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.
DeBraine Lake is a 14-acre water in the Speculator area — small enough that it rarely shows up in regional fishing reports, and quiet enough that it stays that way. No stocking data on file with DEC, which typically means native brookies or nothing at all, and the lack of formal access or trailhead reference suggests this is either private shoreline or bushwhack territory. Waters like this exist all over the southern Adirondacks: named on the map, but functionally off-grid unless you know a landowner or you're working from a topo and a compass. If you're serious about fishing it, call the regional DEC office in Northville for access intel.
Deer Lake is an 8-acre pond in the Speculator region — small enough that most maps skip it, deep enough in the working forest that access details shift with timber operations and seasonal conditions. No species data on file, which typically means it's either stocked intermittently by the DEC or left to whatever brookies or sunfish survive the winter draw-down. The name suggests old hunting-camp usage, and ponds this size in this part of the Park often sit on private inholdings or at the end of gated logging roads that open seasonally. If you're headed out, confirm access and ownership with the local DEC office in Northville before you load the canoe.
Deer Lake is an 8-acre pond in the Speculator region — small enough to canoe in an afternoon, remote enough that most visitors to the central Adirondacks never register its name. No fish stocking records on file, which typically means native brookies or nothing at all; the DEC maintains minimal data on ponds this size outside the High Peaks corridor. Access details are sparse in state records, but waters of this scale in the Speculator area usually mean old logging roads, private inholdings, or unmaintained trails that require local knowledge. If you're chasing solitude and willing to work for it, start with the Region 5 DEC office in Ray Brook for current access status.
Diamond Lake is a 25-acre pond tucked in the working forest west of Speculator — not a wilderness destination, more a local access point with little public information on record. No fish stocking data in the DEC files, and no formal trails indexed to the shoreline, which suggests either private holdings or gated timber company land with seasonal access patterns that shift year to year. If you're chasing it down, call the town offices in Lake Pleasant or check with the Region 5 DEC fisheries bureau — they'll know whether there's a put-in and whether it's worth the drive. These mid-sized ponds in the southwestern Adirondacks tend to be either sleeper brook trout water or entirely unmanaged; Diamond could be either.