Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Upper Cat Pond is a small, seven-acre water tucked into the Long Lake township — remote enough that it doesn't appear on most recreational fishing or paddling circuits, and obscure enough that access details remain largely undocumented in standard DEC or trail guides. No fish species data on record, which typically signals either minimal stocking history or limited angler pressure to generate survey work. The "Upper" designation suggests a companion Cat Pond downstream or nearby, but without clear trail or put-in information, this one sits in that quiet category of Adirondack ponds known mostly to hunters, trappers, and the occasional bushwhacker with a topo map and a reason to be there.
Upper Moose Pond is a 40-acre pond in the Long Lake town corridor — part of the Moose Pond chain that includes Lower Moose and Little Moose, though access and connectivity details remain obscure in most trail literature. The pond sits in working forest country where private land and easement access can shift season to season; if you're planning a visit, confirm current put-in options with the town or local outfitters before you load the canoe. No fish species data on record, which usually means either unstocked or simply unreported — brook trout are the default assumption in most Long Lake backcountry ponds, but you're fishing on faith. This is quiet-water paddling territory, not a trailhead destination.