Every named summit in the Adirondack Park — the 46 High Peaks plus the rest. Filter by region, elevation, or 46er status.
Ainger Hill stands at 659 feet in the northeastern Adirondacks — a low, wooded summit with no maintained trail. Worth a bushwhack only for peak-list completists; no views, no facilities.
Alec La Mountain Mountain rises to 1,188 feet in the southeastern Adirondacks. A modest summit with no maintained trail — bushwhackers only.
Allen Mountain stands at 4,340 feet in the Dix Range — the most remote of the 46 High Peaks, with no maintained trail and a 16-mile round-trip from the nearest trailhead. The bushwhack and river crossings make it a full-day commitment, often tackled with Skylight Brook as the approach route.
Armstrong Mountain stands at 4,400 feet — the 22nd-highest of the 46 High Peaks. Typically climbed from the Beaver Meadow Falls trailhead via Gothics or as part of a Great Range traverse; the summit ledges offer clean views east toward Giant Mountain.
Arnold Hill rises to 1,220 feet in the southeastern Adirondacks — a modest summit with no maintained trail. Bushwhackers reach it via compass and map; the wooded top offers no views, but the route itself is the draw for navigators.
Arnold Mountain rises to 2,799 feet in the northern Adirondacks. The summit lacks a maintained trail — bushwhacking only — and offers limited views from its wooded top.