Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Sand Pond is a 23-acre water in the Old Forge corridor — small enough to stay off most paddling radars, quiet enough to fish or float without company on a weekday morning. The pond sits in the working landscape south of the Fulton Chain, part of the patchwork of private holdings, state land, and legacy parcels that define the southwestern Adirondacks. No fish stocking records on file, which usually means native brookies or a fishless basin — worth a cast if you're already in the area, but not a destination fishery. Access and shore conditions vary by season and ownership; check current DEC mapping before you load the canoe.
Sand Pond lies in the Old Forge township — 84 acres of quiet water in a region better known for the Fulton Chain and bigger motorboat destinations. The pond sits off the main corridor traffic, which means it holds its temperature longer into spring and tends to fish slower than the connected lakes, though no recent species data exists in DEC records. Access details are sparse in the public record; local knowledge or a DEC ranger contact in the Old Forge office will clarify current put-in options and whether the shoreline is private or state-managed. Worth checking if you're already in the area and looking for something smaller than Fourth Lake.
Scuttle Hole is a 6-acre pocket pond in the Old Forge township — small enough to slip past most paddlers working the Fulton Chain or heading deeper into the Five Ponds Wilderness. The name alone suggests old logging or trapping history, the kind of feature that showed up on survey maps when every wetland had a working function. No fish data on record, which usually means either unstocked or too shallow to hold trout through summer — worth a cast if you're nearby, but not a destination fishery. Access details are sparse; if you're hunting it down, start with the local DEC office or the Town of Webb historical society.
Shallow Pond is a 13-acre water tucked into the Old Forge working forest — the kind of place that shows up on a topo map but rarely makes it into a trip report. No fish stocking records on file, no maintained trail system, no lean-to — this is either private land or a bushwhack destination for someone who likes the idea of a pond more than the amenities that come with it. The name tells you what you need to know about depth and probably about summer warmth; if you're after solitude and you've got the navigation skills, it's out there. Confirm access and ownership before you go.
Shinder Pond is an 11-acre water tucked into the Old Forge township — small enough to miss on most maps, quiet enough to hold that status. No fish stocking records and no formal access documentation in the state systems, which usually means either private inholdings or a pond that simply fell through the recreational development cracks when the surrounding country got parceled and logged in the late 1800s. Old Forge sits at the southwest corner of the park where the working forest still outnumbers the hiking trails, and ponds like Shinder tend to show up as blue dots between the snowmobile corridors and the private hunting camps. Worth a knock on a door if you're curious — or a look at the county tax maps.
Silver Dollar Pond is one of the smaller named waters in the Old Forge area — two acres tucked into the working forest south of the Fulton Chain, part of the sprawl of ponds, bogs, and beaver meadows that fill the lowlands between the tourist corridor and the West Canada Creek watershed. No public access data on file, no fish stocking records, no trail register — which usually means either private holdings or a put-in so obscure it's known only to locals with canoes and patience. If you're set on fishing it, start with the Town of Webb office or a topo map and a morning to bushwhack.
Sitz Pond is a 21-acre pocket water in the Old Forge township — small enough to miss on a map, quiet enough to have if you find it. No fish stocking records on file, which in the western Adirondacks usually means either unstocked brookies or nothing at all; worth a cast if you're passing through with a rod. The pond sits in working forest land where access and ownership can shift — check current DEC or timber company postings before heading in. Old Forge proper is the supply hub: gas, groceries, and the Adirondack Hardware that still sells minnows by the scoop.
Slim Pond is a 14-acre pocket of water in the Old Forge area — small enough to be overlooked, big enough to hold a canoe for an afternoon. The name suggests what you'd expect: a narrow basin, likely shallow along the margins, tucked into second-growth forest typical of the southern working forest. No fish stocking records on file, which usually means native brookies if anything, or just a quiet paddle with no casting pressure. Access details aren't well-documented — worth asking at an Old Forge outfitter or checking the latest DEC access atlas before planning a trip in.
Snake Pond is a two-acre pocket water in the Old Forge township — small enough that it likely holds more interest as a bushwhack destination or a map curiosity than as a fishing or paddling target. No fish species on record, no formal trail access, no established campsites. These kinds of minor ponds often serve as waypoints for hunters, trappers, or off-trail navigators working between better-known waters — functional features in the working forest rather than recreational destinations. If you're headed that way, bring a compass and a reason.
Snider Pond is an 8-acre pond in the Old Forge area — small enough that it rarely shows up on regional recreation lists, but named and mapped, which usually means local access or private shoreline with a history. No fish stocking records on file, which points to either a shallow basin that winterkills or limited public interest in the fishery. Old Forge proper sits on a chain of bigger waters — First through Eighth Lakes — so ponds like Snider tend to stay off the paddling circuit unless they're tied to a trailhead or a camp lease. Worth a look on a DeLorme or a town tax map if you're piecing together the drainage around the Fulton Chain.
Snyders Pond is an 8-acre water tucked into the Old Forge township — small enough that it likely sees more moose than motorboats, and quiet enough that most paddlers in the Fulton Chain corridor have never heard of it. No fish stocking records on file, which usually means brook trout if the pond has inlet flow, or nothing at all if it's a glacial kettle with low oxygen. The Old Forge area is dense with ponds like this — private-access or landlocked by terrain — so confirm access before you bushwhack. If it's open water, it's the kind of place you fish once just to see what swims there.
Soda Pond is a 23-acre pond in the Old Forge area — small enough to stay off the radar, big enough to paddle without circling twice in ten minutes. No fish data on record, which usually means either unstocked and unmemorable or private and unmonitored; access details are murky, and there's no clear trailhead or public launch in the usual DEC directories. The name suggests old logging-era color or mineral content in the water — Soda Springs, Soda Creek, Soda Range names scatter across the western Adirondacks from the tannery and lumber boom years. Worth a call to the Old Forge visitor center if you're curious; this one doesn't advertise itself.
South Pond sits in the Old Forge township on the western edge of the park — a 40-acre water without the fishing pressure or boat traffic of the Fulton Chain just to the east. The pond has no public record of stocked or native fish species, which likely means it's either fishless or holds remnant brook trout from natural reproduction — worth a cast if you're nearby, but not a destination fishery. Access details are thin; this is one of those Old Forge-area ponds that shows up on the map but doesn't make it into the DEC access guides, so expect to do some local recon if you're planning a visit. If you find a put-in, it's a canoe or kayak pond — nothing more.
Spider Pond is a one-acre pocket water in the Old Forge area — small enough that it won't show up on most recreational lake lists, but it exists as a named feature in the DEC inventory. No fish stocking records, no formal access trails in the public record, and no nearby peaks or maintained trailheads to anchor a description. These micro-ponds scattered through the western Adirondacks often survive as relics of old logging-era geography — spring-fed, tannic, landlocked by second-growth timber. If you're hunting it down, you're either bushwhacking with a GPS or you already know the old road that gets close.
Squirrel Ponds — three acres tucked somewhere in the Old Forge township grid — exists in the data but not in the recreational conversation, which usually means either private holdings, landlocked public parcels, or beaver work that comes and goes with the water table. The name suggests local usage rather than official DEC designation, and the absence of fish records points to seasonal depth or access issues that keep it off the stocking rotation. If you're after named water in the Old Forge corridor, the South Branch of the Moose River and the chain lakes (First through Eighth) are the proven destinations — Squirrel Ponds remains more of a map dot than a paddle plan.
Squirrel Ponds is a 3-acre water tucked into the working forest west of Old Forge — small enough that it doesn't appear on most recreational maps and quiet enough that it stays that way. No fish stocking records, no maintained trail system, no lean-tos — this is the kind of place you find by accident or because you're logging coordinates for a paddle-every-pond project. The surrounding terrain is typical West-Central Adirondack lowland: mixed hardwood, wetland buffer, second-growth timber corridors. If you're on the water here, you're likely alone.
Squirrel Ponds — one acre, tucked into the Old Forge township's sprawl of named and unnamed water — sits on the quiet end of the town's paddle-and-portage inventory. No fish data on record, no trailhead coordinates that show up on DEC lists, which usually means private access or landlocked by private holdings with no established public easement. The name suggests a surveyor's joke or a local holdover; dozens of small ponds in the Fulton Chain corridor carry names like this — mapped, named, technically public water, but functionally off-limits unless you know a landowner. Worth a call to the Old Forge Visitor Center if you're chasing obscure water; they keep informal notes on what's reachable and what isn't.
Stearns Mudhole lives up to its name — a shallow nine-acre pond in the Old Forge township, the kind of water you'd paddle past on a longer trip or fish if you already know it holds something worth catching. No species data on file with DEC, which usually means it's either marginal habitat or nobody's bothered to net it in recent memory. The "mudhole" designation isn't marketing — it's topography: soft bottom, probable beaver work, wetland margins that shift with the season. If you're looking for it, you're either a completist or you've got a reason.
Stewart Pond is a two-acre pocket water in the Old Forge area — small enough that it doesn't appear on most recreational radar, and lacking the fish-stocking records that pull anglers to larger nearby waters. Ponds this size in the central Adirondacks often sit tucked into private or mixed-use timberland, accessed by unmarked logging roads or simply overlooked in favor of the Fourth Lake / Fulton Chain corridor that dominates the region's paddling and fishing traffic. Without public access infrastructure or a DEC campsite designation, Stewart functions more as a named point on the map than a destination — the kind of water that only locals with permission or long memory actually visit. Check the DEC's public access atlas before bushwhacking.
Streeter Fishpond is a 13-acre pond in the Old Forge area — small enough to stay off most radar, large enough to hold some character. The name suggests stocking history or private management at some point, though current fish population and public access details are thin on the ground. Old Forge waters tend to be either heavily trafficked (the Fulton Chain) or tucked into working forest with gated seasonal roads — Streeter likely falls into the latter category. Worth a call to the Old Forge visitor center or local outfitters if you're trying to pin down current conditions or whether there's a put-in.
Sucker Pond is an 18-acre quiet water tucked into the Old Forge township — small enough to paddle in an hour, large enough to feel remote once you're on it. The name suggests historic brook trout habitat (suckers often share water with native brookies in Adirondack ponds), though current stocking records are sparse and local knowledge runs thin. Old Forge sits at the southern door of the Fulton Chain lakes region, where most attention flows toward bigger water and summer crowds — which leaves ponds like this one to the locals and the curious. If you're looking for it, start with the town assessor's map and a conversation at the Old Forge Hardware.
Surprise Pond is a five-acre pocket water in the Old Forge area — small enough that it doesn't show up on most recreational maps and remote enough that it lives up to its name. No fish stocking records and no established access mean this one stays off the casual paddler's radar; if you find it, you're likely doing so by bushwhack or old logging trace rather than marked trail. The pond sits in mixed hardwood-conifer forest typical of the central Adirondack transition zone — quiet, unmanaged, and functionally wild. Bring a compass and don't expect cell service.
Sylvan Ponds — a pair of small connected basins totaling 13 acres — sits in the Old Forge area, tucked into the working forest west of the main tourist corridor. The ponds appear on older USGS maps but lack the formal trail access and DEC designation that would put them on a weekend itinerary; most visitors to Old Forge never hear the name. No fish stocking records, no maintained campsites — this is quietwater for the bushwhacker or the local who knows the logging roads. If you're looking for solitude within five miles of a snowmobile trail network, start here.
Sylvan Ponds sits in the Old Forge region — a modest 16-acre water with little public information on the books and no recorded fish species data in the state files. The name suggests private or semi-private history, common for smaller ponds in the Old Forge corridor that predate DEC inventory. Without confirmed access or stocking records, this is the kind of water that stays off the casual paddler's radar — known to immediate neighbors, invisible to the trailhead crowd. If you're researching access, start with the town clerk or local outfitters; DEC Region 6 may have newer survey data not yet in the digital system.