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.
Fall Lake is a 23-acre pond in the Speculator region — quiet, off the main corridors, and largely untracked by the lake-hopping crowd that works the bigger waters north and west of town. No fish data on file with DEC, which usually means either unstocked or private — worth a call to the Region 5 office if you're planning a trip with a rod. The name suggests logging-era origins (Fall Brook, fall line, or simply autumn color), but the water itself keeps a low profile in a landscape dense with larger, better-known ponds. Access and ownership status unclear from public records — assume gated or posted unless you confirm otherwise.
Feullard Lake is a five-acre pond in the Speculator region — small enough that it likely sees light pressure from anglers and paddlers who know it's there, but without documented fish species or established trail access in the DEC records. Waters this size in the southern Adirondacks often sit on private land or require bushwhacking through mixed hardwood stands, which keeps them off the casual weekend radar. If you're working a local topo map or hunting for brookies in unmapped headwater systems, Feullard might be worth the scout — but confirm access and ownership before you commit to the hike in.