Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Thurman Pond sits in the southeastern Adirondacks near the town of Schroon Lake — a 91-acre water with no formal fish stocking records and limited documentation in the DEC's current surveys. The pond falls into that category of mid-sized Adirondack waters that see local use but little published detail: likely private or road-access shoreline, possibly some seasonal camps, not a trailhead destination. For anglers or paddlers passing through the Schroon corridor, it's worth a local inquiry at the town office or a bait shop — these waters sometimes hold wild brookies or perch populations that never make it into the stocking reports. No nearby High Peaks draws, but that's often the trade for solitude.
Twentyninth Pond is a 12-acre pocket water in the Schroon Lake region — small enough that it rarely shows up on recreational fishing reports, quiet enough that it stays off most paddling itineraries. The name suggests it was part of an old surveyor's sequence or township grid, though no dramatic origin story has stuck to it the way some Adirondack waters collect lore. No fish species data on file with DEC, which usually means either unstocked and unfished or too small and shallow to support a year-round population. Worth knowing if you're working through obscure ponds in the area, but this one doesn't pull visitors the way named-peak basins or roadside access points do.