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.
New Lake sits on the books as a 25-acre water in the Speculator region — one of dozens of smaller named lakes and ponds scattered across the central Adirondacks where documentation runs thin and public records trail off into blank cells. No fish survey data on file, no mapped access trail, no mention in the standard hiking guides. These quiet waters often turn up on USGS quads and old forestry maps with nothing more than a name and an acreage estimate — sometimes reachable by bushwhack or old logging trace, sometimes landlocked by posted land or wetland buffer. If you're headed to New Lake, confirm access and ownership locally before you pack the rod.
North Branch Lake is a small, 24-acre water tucked in the Speculator area — the kind of backcountry lake that stays off most radar because it requires local knowledge or a topographic map to find. No public access trail is documented, and no fish species records are on file, which suggests limited management history and likely private shoreline or rough bushwhack approach. Waters like this tend to be either overlooked brook trout habitat or catch basins for whatever runs downstream from beaver activity in the watershed. If you're looking at North Branch Lake, you're either already there or working from a very specific set of directions.