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.
Hedges Lake is a 112-acre water in the southeastern Adirondacks, set in the lower-elevation terrain between Lake George and the Vermont line — quieter country than the big lake corridors to the west. The shoreline is largely private, which keeps it off the casual paddler's radar, and there's no public launch or DEC campsite to anchor a visit. No fish species data on file with the state, which usually means limited stocking history and light angling pressure, if any. If you're poking around this corner of Warren County, Hedges is a name on the map — not a destination, but part of the patchwork of small lakes that define the region's working landscape.
Hidden Lake sits tucked into the Lake George Wild Forest — a 20-acre pocket of quiet water in a region better known for its big lake traffic and resort shorelines. The name is functional: this is one of the less-traveled waters in the southeastern Adirondacks, away from the boat launches and trailhead crowds that define most of the Lake George corridor. No fish species data on record, which typically means light angling pressure and no formal stocking history. Access details are sparse — worth confirming current trailhead status and ownership boundaries with the local DEC ranger before planning a visit.