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.
Jenny Lake is a 23-acre pond in the Old Forge township — small, off the main corridor, and lacking the kind of foot traffic or DEC management that would put fish stocking or survey data on record. It sits in working forest country where private inholdings, club leases, and unmaintained logging roads make access a question of permission more than parking. No known public trail, no lean-to, no formal put-in — the kind of water that shows up on the quad map but stays quiet because it takes local knowledge or a float plane to reach it. If you're poking around Old Forge backroads with a canoe, ask at the hardware store first.
Jones Lake sits just south of Old Forge in the Fulton Chain watershed — a 49-acre pond tucked into mixed hardwood and hemlock forest typical of the southwest Adirondacks. No species data on file, but small waters in this drainage typically hold brookies, perch, or panfish if they hold anything at all; worth a reconnaissance cast if you're in the area. The Old Forge region skews toward motorboat lakes and resort access, so smaller named waters like Jones often fly under the radar — check local land status and access before you bushwhack in. This is low-elevation country, ice-out by mid-April, and the kind of place that pays off for explorers willing to do the legwork.