Every named summit in the Adirondack Park — the 46 High Peaks plus the rest. Filter by region, elevation, or 46er status.
Painter Mountain stands at 1,362 feet in the southern Adirondacks, a modest summit with trailless access through mixed forest. The peak sees light use—no maintained path, but the elevation gain is manageable for scramblers comfortable with map and compass.
Panther Mountain is a 2,142-foot summit in the Pharaoh Lake Wilderness, accessed via the Pharaoh Mountain Trail. The approach is moderate, wooded most of the way, with limited views from the top — primarily a through-hike peak rather than a destination climb.
Panther Peak stands at 4,442 feet in the Tupper Lake region — the eighteenth-highest of the 46 High Peaks. The herdpath ascent is steep and trailless, requiring map and compass work, but the wooded summit offers solitude seldom found on the better-known climbs.
Peaked Hill reaches 1,493 feet in the southeastern Adirondacks. A modest elevation gain makes it accessible year-round, though the summit is wooded with limited views.
Pinnacle rises to 1,683 feet in the eastern Adirondacks. A modest summit by regional standards, but the name hints at a sharp profile — check local trail registers for current route conditions.
Potter Mountain rises to 1,627 feet in the southeastern Adirondacks. A modest summit by park standards, but the elevation gain is real and the wooded ridgeline stays quiet year-round.