Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Carry Pond is a seven-acre water in the Raquette Lake drainage — the kind of small, off-trail pond that holds brook trout or holds nothing, depending on the decade and the beaver activity. The name suggests portage history, likely a link in an old canoe route before the roads came through, but today it sits quiet in second-growth hardwoods with no formal access or maintained trail. No fish data on file with DEC, which usually means either unstocked or too shallow to winter over a trout population. If you know where it is, you already know why you're going.
Cellar Pond is a 3-acre pocket in the Raquette Lake region — small enough that it likely sees more moose than paddlers, and remote enough that it doesn't appear on most recreational radar. No fish data on record, which usually means either it winters out hard or nobody's bothered to stock it in recent memory. The name suggests old logging or settlement history — cellar holes and stone foundations are common throughout this part of the central Adirondacks, remnants of 19th-century clearing that's since grown back to second-growth hardwood. Worth investigating if you're already deep in the Raquette Lake backcountry and collecting small waters; otherwise, this one stays quiet by design.
Chain Ponds sits in the Raquette Lake Wild Forest — 23 acres split across multiple basins in dense second-growth forest south of the main lake. Access is bushwhack or by paddling up one of the inlet streams during high water, which makes this more of a local secret than a trailhead destination. No fish stocking records and no maintained campsites, so it's mostly left to hunters glassing for deer sign in October and the occasional canoeist looking for absolute solitude. Bring a compass and a good topo — the ponds don't announce themselves from the water.
Clear Pond is an 18-acre water in the Raquette Lake region — small enough to feel remote, large enough to hold a shoreline worth exploring by canoe or kayak. No formal fish survey data on record, which usually means either native brook trout in low numbers or nothing at all; local knowledge and a few casts with a fly rod will settle the question. The pond sits within the web of old roads, drainage routes, and connector trails that knit together the Raquette Lake backcountry — not a destination water, but a solid option if you're already in the area and looking for quiet water away from the bigger lakes. Expect blow-down on unmarked approaches and no maintained facilities.
Clear Pond is a 74-acre water in the Raquette Lake township — mid-sized for the region, tucked into the working forest south of the main Raquette Lake basin. No public access data or fish stocking records on file, which usually means private inholdings or land-locked state parcels awaiting easement or trail development. The name shows up on USGS quads and DEC wetland maps but not in the standard paddling guides — a placeholder for now. If you're poking around the Raquette Lake backcountry and see a footpath, check the DEC unit management plan or call the Inlet ranger station before assuming it's open water.
Constable Pond is a 50-acre water in the Raquette Lake region — part of the quiet, less-trafficked network of ponds and forest between the Blue Ridge Road corridor and the Fulton Chain. No fish data on record, which usually means minimal stocking history and light angling pressure, though wild brookies turn up in these back-country ponds often enough to keep a rod in the canoe. Access specifics vary across this zone — some waters require a paddle-in from a larger lake, others sit at the end of unmarked woods roads or old logging trails that may or may not appear on current maps. Worth confirming access and ownership status before planning a trip.
Covey Pond is a two-acre pocket water in the Raquette Lake region — small enough that it likely sees more moose than anglers, and remote enough that access details aren't widely documented. No fish species on record, which in Adirondack terms usually means either it winters out or nobody's bothered to stock it. The name suggests old hunting camp ties, common in this part of the park where private inholdings and club lands still shape the landscape. If you're poking around the Raquette Lake drainage and stumble on it, you're either lost or you know exactly what you're doing.
Cracker Pond is a 24-acre pocket water in the Raquette Lake township — remote enough that fishing and access records are thin, which usually means either private holdings nearby or a bushwhack-only approach through working forest. The name suggests old logger camps or a trapper's cabin, the kind of backcountry nomenclature that predates the Blue Line by decades. No formal trail appears on current DEC maps, and no stocking or survey data on file. If you're sorting through a USGS quad looking for untracked water in the Raquette drainage, Cracker Pond is the kind of dot that rewards a satellite pass and a conversation with a local before you commit the afternoon.
Cranberry Pond is a 28-acre pond in the Raquette Lake region — small enough to hold a quiet morning paddle, large enough to feel removed once you're on the water. The name suggests the shoreline character you'd expect: boggy edges, conifer fringe, the kind of water that holds its own temperature well into June. No fish species data on file, which typically means either natural fishless conditions or simply under-documented — common for ponds off the main paddling corridors in this part of the Park. Worth checking local access and parking before you go; not all ponds in the Raquette drainage have formal DEC trailheads or maintained put-ins.