Every named summit in the Adirondack Park — the 46 High Peaks plus the rest. Filter by region, elevation, or 46er status.
Deadwood Mountain rises to 1,286 feet in the southern Adirondacks — a low, wooded summit with no maintained trail. Bushwhackers reach it for the grid, not the views.
Deer Leap rises to 1,224 feet in the southeastern Adirondacks, a short climb with open ledges that deliver lake views without the mileage of higher peaks. The trail is under a mile each way — accessible year-round and often used as a winter snowshoe route.
Dipper Pond Mountain rises to 1,168 feet in the northern Adirondacks — a modest summit typically reached as a bushwhack rather than by maintained trail. The terrain is wooded throughout; no views from the top.
Dippikill Mountain rises to 1,562 feet in the southern Adirondacks, a modest summit accessible by unmarked routes through mixed hardwood forest. The peak sees light traffic and offers limited views, but rewards bushwhackers with solitude.