Every named summit in the Adirondack Park — the 46 High Peaks plus the rest. Filter by region, elevation, or 46er status.
Baldwin Hill rises to 3,228 feet in the central Adirondacks. The summit is trailless and wooded — no formal path, no maintained access, typically visited only by bushwhackers working through the region's lower peaks.
A sub-peak of Whiteface near the Memorial Highway base lodge. Member of the Lake Placid 9er challenge.
Bear Mountain rises to 1,877 feet in the southeastern Adirondacks. A modest summit by park standards, it offers a shorter ascent than its High Peaks neighbors — accessible for beginners testing their legs before higher ground.
Big Burn Mountain rises to 2,923 feet in the southern Adirondacks. The name references a historic forest fire; the summit is wooded with no marked trail — bushwhack access only.
Blue Mountain rises 2,641 feet in the central Adirondacks and supports a fire tower on its summit — one of the few still staffed seasonally. The 4-mile round-trip trail climbs steadily through hardwood forest; the tower adds 360-degree views across lakes and distant High Peaks.
Boundary Peak stands at 4,826 feet on the eastern edge of the Santanoni Range. It's a trailless summit reached by bushwhack, typically climbed in combination with Panther Peak or Santanoni — dense forest and steep terrain make it a navigation challenge.