Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Tanaher Pond is an 11-acre water tucked into the Keene town boundaries — small enough that it doesn't appear on most recreational radar, and remote enough that access details aren't widely documented. The pond sits outside the standard hiking corridors and trailhead clusters that define the central High Peaks, which means it's either private, roadless, or both. No fish data on record, no established DEC presence, no nearby lean-tos in the state system. If you're looking for it, start with the town clerk or a pre-1950s USGS quad — this one belongs to the category of named Adirondack waters that exist on paper more than they do in boots-on-trail reality.
Trout Pond is a 31-acre water tucked in the Keene township — not to be confused with the dozen other Trout Ponds scattered across the Park, each claiming the name for the same predictable reason. The pond sits outside the High Peaks corridor but still in the gravitational pull of Keene Valley, which makes it less of a weekender magnet than the roadside pull-offs on NY-73. No fish species data on file with DEC, though the name suggests brook trout at some point in its stocking history — or just wishful thinking by an optimistic surveyor. Access and trail details aren't widely documented, which usually means either private land complications or a bushwhack situation; call the Keene town office or stop by the Mountaineer in town for local beta.
Twin Pond is a three-acre pond in the Keene town footprint — small enough that it doesn't carry the recreational or access infrastructure of the region's better-known waters, and remote enough that it holds to itself. No fish species data on file with DEC, which usually means either no stocking history or catch reports too thin to register. The name suggests a paired-pond system, common in the Park's glacial hollows, though whether the twin is still mapped or has since silted into wetland is unclear from the survey records. If you're heading this direction, confirm access and current conditions locally — ponds this size can shift from open water to beaver meadow in a single heavy flow year.