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.
Forest Lake is a 22-acre water tucked into the Lake George Wild Forest — one of those mid-sized ponds that never quite made it onto the tourist circuit and stayed quiet as a result. No fish stocking records in the DEC database, which usually means either natural brook trout reproduction or a pond that went acidic decades ago and never recovered. The lake sits far enough from NY-9N and I-87 to filter out day-trippers, close enough to the Lake George basin to make it a logical add-on for anyone working through the Wild Forest trail system. If you fish it, bring a thermometer — summer stratification in small Adirondack lakes this size can push trout deep or out entirely by July.
Fourth Lake lies in the Lake George Wild Forest southeast of the main lake corridor — a 48-acre sheet tucked into the wooded ridge country that defines the eastern Adirondacks before they drop into the Champlain Valley. No fish stocking records on file, no marked trails or lean-tos in the DEC inventory, and the shoreline is a mix of private holdings and state forest land that keeps this one off the casual paddler's list. It's the kind of water that shows up on the quad map but not in the guidebooks — a placeholder name in a region dense with better-known destinations. Check the DEC land viewer before planning access; Fourth Lake is more atlas entry than outing.