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.
Northrup Lake is an 11-acre pocket water in the Raquette Lake township — small enough that it doesn't show up on most recreation maps, and remote enough that it stays off the weekend circuit. The lake sits in working forest land, and access typically means knowing a logging road or paddling in from a connected water system; this isn't a trailhead-and-sign situation. No fish species data on record, which usually means either the lake hasn't been surveyed in decades or it's been written off as marginal habitat. If you're poking around the Raquette drainage with a topo map and a canoe, Northrup is the kind of place you find by accident — and remember because no one else was there.