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.
West Caroga Lake is the larger of the two Caroga lakes — together they form a 500-acre chain in southern Fulton County, east of the Great Sacandaga and well outside the Blue Line. The west lake holds most of the development: year-round homes, seasonal camps, a state boat launch on the south shore off NY-29A. It's a warmwater fishery — bass, panfish, pickerel — and a local weekend destination rather than a backcountry asset. The lake drains east into East Caroga Lake, which drains into the Sacandaga watershed; both lakes sit in farm-and-forest transition country, closer in character to the southern Adirondack fringe than to the interior lakes most users associate with the Park.
West Lake is a 35-acre water tucked into the broader Great Sacandaga Lake region — a quieter alternative to the main reservoir's recreational sprawl and one of the smaller named lakes in a landscape dominated by the 29-mile-long Sacandaga impoundment. The area trades the High Peaks drama for accessible, low-elevation paddling and shoreline camps, though West Lake itself sits removed from the busiest boat traffic corridors. No fish stocking records on file, which often means either overlooked brook trout holdovers or a pond that winterkills — local knowledge beats the official data here. Worth a scouting trip if you're already working the Sacandaga basin and want smaller water.
White Lake is a small 13-acre water in the Great Sacandaga Lake region — the kind of named pond that shows up on survey maps but doesn't draw much traffic or generate much record-keeping. No fish species data on file with DEC, which usually means it's either too shallow to winter-stock, privately held, or simply off the radar for anglers who have bigger targets within a ten-minute drive. The Sacandaga corridor is better known for its reservoir access and seasonal camps than for backcountry ponds, and White Lake fits that pattern — a local name on a local water, likely accessed by whoever owns the shoreline.
Winter Lake is an 8-acre pond in the Great Sacandaga Lake region — small enough to canoe in an hour, large enough to hold a quiet afternoon if you've got it to yourself. No fish data on record, no nearby peaks pulling hikers off the road, and no curated access points in the directory yet — this one sits in the overlooked middle ground between the southern Adirondacks and the reservoir country. If you know how to reach it, it's yours; if you don't, start with the town clerk in Northville or Day and work backward from there.
Woods Lake sits in the southern Adirondacks near the Great Sacandaga Lake reservoir system — a 70-acre pond that holds its own water and its own quiet in a region better known for the engineered shoreline to the south. No fish stocking records in the DEC database, which usually means brookies or holdover bass that nobody's bothered to survey, or it means the lake doesn't connect well and winters hard. Access details are sparse in the public record; this is one of those waters where you either know the local road in or you're driving past it without realizing it's there. Worth a call to the town clerk in Edinburg or Northville if you're planning a trip.
Woodward Lake is a 46-acre water in the Great Sacandaga Lake region — part of the quieter, less-trampled southwest corner of the Park where named lakes sit on private land or in mixed-use forest without the High Peaks foot traffic. No public fish stocking records and no DEC-designated access means this is likely private or landlocked, the kind of water you see from a town road or hear about from someone with a camp key. If you're chasing publicly fishable water in this zone, the Sacandaga system itself — West Branch, Main Stem, and the reservoir — is where the access and the action are. Woodward remains on the map as a name, not a destination.
Woodworth Lake sits in the Great Sacandaga corridor — 35 acres of open water in a region better known for the reservoir itself than for the smaller named ponds and lakes that dot the surrounding forest. Without recorded fish survey data, it's likely a warmwater fishery (bass, pickerel, panfish) typical of southern Adirondack waters at lower elevations, though local knowledge is the only reliable guide here. Access details are sparse in the public record, which usually means either private shoreline or unmaintained DEC access that doesn't make it onto the standard maps. Worth a call to the Northville DEC office or a stop at a local tackle shop before you load the canoe.