Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Glidden Marsh sits in the Paradox Lake region — 18 acres of shallow wetland that functions more as wildlife habitat than paddling destination. The marsh is the kind of place that registers on topographic maps but rarely appears in trip reports: no designated access, no formal trails, and no fish stocking records to pull anglers off the nearby lakes. Beaver activity shapes the water levels season to season, and the edges are browsed hard by deer. If you're scanning a map for solitude in the Paradox corridor, this is the terrain that delivers it — but you'll be bushwhacking in, and the reward is observation, not recreation.
Goose Pond sits in the Paradox Lake region — a 64-acre pond in a quietly forested pocket east of Schroon Lake, where the tourist traffic thins and the ponds tend toward private shoreline and camp leases. No fish species on record, which usually signals either marginal habitat or simply that DEC hasn't surveyed it in decades. The pond carries the kind of name — Goose, Mud, Long — that marks working-camp waters rather than destination fishing, and access here is almost certainly limited to landowner permission or a paddle-in from a connecting water. Worth a look on the DeLorme if you're poking around the Paradox drainage, but don't expect a trailhead.
Gooseneck Pond is a 75-acre water in the Paradox Lake region — part of the quieter, less-trafficked southeastern quadrant of the Park where ponds tend to be private or difficult to reach. The name suggests a bend or narrow passage in the shoreline, typical of glacial drainage ponds in this terrain, though public access and current use aren't well documented. Without clear trail or launch information, this is one to research locally before planning a trip — the town of Schroon or nearby outfitters may have better intel on whether it's reachable and what you'll find when you get there.
Goosepuddle Pond is a three-acre pocket water in the Paradox Lake drainage — the kind of small pond that appears on USGS maps but rarely shows up in fishing reports or trail guides. No formal trail access on record, no designated campsites, no fish stocking data in the DEC database — which means it's either spring-fed and fishless, or it's holding native brookies that see almost no pressure. The name alone (Goosepuddle) suggests either old logging-camp humor or a seasonal wetland character that keeps most paddlers pointed toward Paradox Lake proper. Worth a look if you're already in the area with a canoe and a taste for bushwhacking, but set expectations accordingly.
Grizzle Ocean — a 22-acre pond in the Paradox Lake region — carries the kind of peculiar name that likely traces back to some forgotten logging-era surveyor or trapper. The pond sits in the mid-elevation forest south of the Schroon Lake corridor, away from the High Peaks tourist traffic and the lean-to loop trails. No fish stocking records on file, no DEC campsite designations, no trailhead pull-offs with kiosks — this is the category of Adirondack water that shows up on the topo map but not in the guidebooks. Access likely requires either private-land permission or a bushwhack from the nearest seasonal road.