Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Ginger Pond is a 12-acre pocket water in the Old Forge area — small enough to slip past casual notice, large enough to hold a canoe for an hour or two of quiet paddling. No fish survey data on record, which often means either minimal stocking history or simply that DEC hasn't prioritized sampling a pond this size in recent cycles. The Old Forge region is dense with interconnected ponds and carry trails; Ginger likely fits into that web, though access details tend to come from local knowledge rather than trailhead signs. Worth asking at an Old Forge outfitter if you're mapping a multi-pond paddle day.
Goose Pond is a five-acre pocket water in the Old Forge area — small enough that it rarely appears on recreational radar, but the kind of place that shows up in local knowledge and older USGS quads. No fish stocking records on file, which typically means either naturally reproducing brookies in modest numbers or a pond that winters out and runs fishless. Access details are scarce in the standard trail databases; if you're hunting for it, start with the town assessor's parcel maps and be prepared for a bushwhack or an unmarked woods road. Old Forge has dozens of ponds in this size class — some are gems, some are beaver swamps with marginal access.
Graham Pond is a small, low-profile water in the Old Forge township — twelve acres tucked into the working forest west of the Fulton Chain, the kind of pond that doesn't appear on most recreation maps and sees more use from local anglers than through-hikers. No formal public access or maintained trail in the DEC inventory, which typically means private landowner permission required or a bushwhack approach through active timberland. No fish stocking records on file with the state, though ponds this size in the Old Forge drainage often hold wild brookies if the inlet flow is cold enough year-round. Best confirmed with local outfitters or the Old Forge Visitor Center before planning a trip.
Grass Pond is a 40-acre water in the Old Forge network — part of the sprawling Fulton Chain / Moose River region where ponds multiply and naming conventions sometimes feel like an afterthought. The pond sits in working wilderness: thick shoreline, beaver activity, and the kind of quiet you earn by putting in effort or knowing the right put-in. No fish survey data on file, which usually means limited angling pressure and a pond that's more about the paddle than the catch. Access details matter here — this is Old Forge backcountry, not a roadside pull-off.
Grass Pond is a two-acre pocket of water in the Old Forge area — small enough that it likely sees more moose than paddlers, and the kind of place that only shows up on detailed USGS quads. No fish stocking records, no formal access trail in the DEC inventory, which puts it in that category of Adirondack waters that exist more as waypoints for through-hikers or hunting-season destinations than as recreational targets. If you're looking for solitude and already know how to get there, Grass Pond delivers; if you're planning a first trip to the region, this isn't the water to start with.
Green Pond is an 11-acre water in the Old Forge area — small enough to paddle in an afternoon, large enough to feel removed once you're on it. No fish species data on record, which usually means it's either stocked intermittently or fished lightly enough that DEC surveys haven't prioritized it. The Old Forge corridor has dozens of ponds in this size range, many accessible by short carries from forest roads or connected by the region's interlocking paddle routes. Check with Old Forge outfitters for current access — some of these smaller ponds shift between private easement and open carry depending on landowner agreements.