Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Halls Pond is an 8-acre pocket water in the Lake George region — small enough that most paddlers wouldn't make a dedicated trip, but the kind of spot that pulls locals off the road when they're already nearby. No fish species data on record, which likely means it's been passed over by DEC surveys or doesn't hold much of a population worth tracking. Access details are sparse in the public record, so this is one to scout in person or ask around town before loading the kayak. The acreage suggests a quick loop paddle at most — more of a quiet-water interlude than a destination.
Hovey Pond is a two-acre pocket of water in the Lake George region — small enough that it doesn't show up on most recreational fishing reports and quiet enough that it stays off the summer lake-hopping circuit. No maintained trail infrastructure or designated camping, and no fish stocking records in the DEC database, which means it functions more as a landscape feature than a destination. The kind of pond you pass on a bushwhack or notice from a ridgeline and file away as a landmark rather than a place to paddle or cast a line.