Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Bear Pond stretches 132 acres in the Long Lake township — remote enough that access details aren't codified in the standard trail guides, and large enough that it's not a backcountry secret. No fish species data on file with DEC, which usually means either unmanaged wild brookies or water too shallow and weedy to hold trout year-round. The pond sits in the working forest west of the Long Lake hamlet, where old logging roads and private inholdings complicate public access — check with the Long Lake town office or local outfitters before planning a trip. If you're already on the water by canoe from Long Lake proper, Bear Pond may connect via seasonal wetland channels depending on spring runoff.
Beaver Flow sits in the Long Lake township — a 101-acre impoundment shaped by beaver activity rather than glacial scour, which makes for shallow water, drowned timber, and a shoreline that shifts with dam maintenance. No fish data on record, which usually means either limited angling pressure or periodic winterkill in shallow flowages like this. Access details are scarce in the public record, suggesting either private land barriers or a put-in that requires local knowledge — worth a stop at the Long Lake town office or a conversation at the boat launch if you're hunting new water. Flowages this size in the central Adirondacks tend to fish best in spring before the weeds take over.
Beaver Pond is a three-acre pocket water in the Long Lake township — small enough that it likely sees more moose traffic than paddler traffic, and remote enough that its fish population (if any) has gone unrecorded by DEC surveys. The name suggests what you'd expect: active beaver work, fluctuating water levels, and a shoreline that shifts with the dam's integrity. Without nearby trailheads or peaks to anchor it, this is the kind of pond you stumble onto while bushwhacking or studying a topo map for something quiet. If you're after solitude and don't need a stocked fishery or a marked trail, it'll deliver.
Bettner Ponds — 28 acres, plural name on the map but a single contiguous water — sits in the Long Lake township without the trailhead signage or DEC lean-to infrastructure that draws crowds to better-known ponds in the corridor. No fish species data on file, which usually means either unstocked and wild or too shallow to hold trout through summer — local knowledge would clarify which. The absence of formal access and the quiet reputation suggest this is a put-in-work destination: bushwhack, old logging road, or a local's canoe carry from a nearby lake system. Worth a conversation at the Long Lake hardware store before you load the boat.
Bettner Ponds — a 43-acre pond cluster in the Long Lake township — sits in the kind of low-relief boreal country that defines the northwestern Adirondacks: dense softwood cover, beaver activity, limited road access. The ponds don't appear on most recreational fishing databases, and without trail infrastructure or maintained put-ins, they're more likely to show up on a DEC wetland map than a paddling itinerary. This is working forest country — International Paper and Lyme Timber lands — where gated logging roads and informal hunter access dominate. If you're headed here, assume you're navigating by topo map and GPS, not trailhead signs.
Black Pond is a five-acre water in the Long Lake township — small enough that it likely sits off the main corridor, tucked into second- or third-growth forest without formal trail access or DEC signage. No fish species on record, which typically means either unstocked and unfished or too small to support a reliable population. Waters this size in the Long Lake area often require bushwhacking or old logging roads to reach, and without nearby peaks or documented campsites, this one lives in the category of ponds you find by accident or by studying the topo. If you're after solitude and don't mind a compass bearing, that's the appeal.
Bottle Pond is a 55-acre water in the Long Lake township — no documented fishery, no formal trail system, no DEC campsite inventory. It's the kind of mid-sized pond that shows up on the map without much backstory: likely accessed by bushwhack or private road, likely fished by whoever owns the nearest camp or knows the woods well enough to walk in without a marked path. The name suggests old logging-era use — a bottle stashed by a survey crew or a trapper's cache point — but that's conjecture. If you're looking for a quiet pond with infrastructure, keep driving; Bottle Pond is for the self-sufficient.
Boundary Pond is a seven-acre water tucked into the Long Lake township without much of a public profile — no fish stocking records, no marked trails in the DEC inventory, and no nearby trailheads that treat it as a named destination. The name suggests it once marked a property line or township edge, a common enough origin story for small ponds that never developed into recreation sites. If you're poking around Long Lake's backcountry with a topo map and a tolerance for bushwhacking, it's there; if you're planning a weekend trip, there are a hundred better-documented options within ten miles.
Bum Pond is a 38-acre water tucked into the Long Lake township — small enough to paddle in an afternoon, remote enough that you won't share it with anyone unless you try. No fish stocking records on file, no marked trail system radiating from the shoreline, no lean-to — this is the kind of pond that exists because the glaciers left it here, not because the state promoted it. Access details are scarce, which in the Adirondacks usually means old logging roads, property-line ambiguity, or both. Worth the effort if you're already in Long Lake with a canoe on the roof and an afternoon to kill.