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.
Warner Lake is a six-acre pocket water in the Speculator area — small enough that it won't show up on most regional recreation maps, and quiet enough that it stays that way. No fish stocking records on file, no DEC campsite designations, no trail register to sign — this is the kind of water that exists in the overlap between private holdings and unmapped state easements, more likely visited by someone who knows exactly where it is than by someone looking for it. If you're already in the area and hunting for solitude, it's worth asking at the Speculator town office or the local fly shop for current access and ownership status.
West Creek Lake is an 8-acre pond in the Speculator area — small enough that it reads more like a widening in the drainage than a named destination, but it's on the map and it holds water year-round. No fish stocking records and no DEC lean-tos or designated campsites in the immediate vicinity, which suggests it's either private-access or backcountry-quiet depending on surrounding land status. If you're poking around the West Canada Creek watershed or working through the patchwork of state land south of Speculator, it's worth a look on the topo — but confirm access and ownership before you bushwhack in.
White Birch Lake is a 10-acre pocket water in the Speculator region — small enough that it doesn't show up on the standard paddling circuit, remote enough that access details stay local. No fish data on record, which often means either private shoreline or a pond that never got stocked and doesn't hold naturals in any numbers worth documenting. The name suggests a stand of paper birch along the shoreline, the kind of grove that marks old burns or blowdown recovery zones in the southern Adirondacks. If you know where it is, you already know why you're going.
Willis Lake is a 35-acre water in the Speculator region — quiet, low-profile, and off the standard lake-hopping routes that dominate the southern Adirondacks. No fish species data on record, which often signals either limited stocking history or simply a pond that doesn't pull angling pressure. The lake sits in mixed hardwood and conifer country typical of the lower-elevation Hamilton County waters — less dramatic than the High Peaks corridor, more forgiving in shoulder seasons. Check local access and ownership status before heading in; many smaller lakes in this region mix private shoreline with informal public use.