Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Owl Pond is a 67-acre water in the Speculator township — one of those mid-sized ponds in the southern Adirondacks that sits just outside the usual trail-network buzz. No fish stocking records on file, which usually means wild brookies or nothing, and without nearby trailhead data it's likely either private-access or reached by an unmarked woods road that only gets visited by locals with long memory. The acreage puts it in that sweet spot between too small to paddle and too big to fish from shore in an afternoon. Worth a call to the Speculator DEC office or a stop at Charlie Johns Store if you're trying to get on the water.
Owl Pond is an 8-acre pocket water in the Speculator area — small enough to stay off most radar, large enough to hold a canoe if you're willing to carry it in. No fish stocking records on file, which typically means wild brookies or nothing at all, and no maintained trail register to speak of. The pond sits in working forest land where access depends on current easement terms and whatever old logging roads still hold; worth a call to the DEC Ray Brook office or the local ranger before you bushwhack. If you're already in the area for Speculator paddling (Lake Pleasant, Sacandaga) or passing through on NY-30, Owl Pond is the kind of detour that rewards low expectations and a topo map.