Every named pond in the Adirondack Park — quiet waters, lean-to destinations, swimming holes. Browse by region or jump to a name.
Ryan Pond is a two-acre pocket water in the Lake George region — small enough that it likely holds more interest as a bushwhack destination or a name on the map than as a fishing or paddling objective. No fish stocking records, no formal trail access, no DEC lean-tos or campsites in the immediate vicinity. The kind of water that shows up on the quad but doesn't generate much foot traffic — worth knowing about if you're piecing together wetland corridors or exploring unmapped corners of a larger tract, but not a destination pond in the conventional sense.
Sawmill Pond is a one-acre pocket water in the Lake George region — small enough that it likely sees more moose traffic than paddler traffic, and the kind of place that shows up on a topo map but rarely in a trip report. No fish species data on record, which at this size usually means seasonal brookies or nothing at all. Waters this small in the southern Adirondacks often sit on private land or lack maintained access, so confirm ownership and entry before bushwhacking in with a canoe.
Schuylerville Basin is a one-acre pocket of water in the Lake George region — small enough that it rarely shows up on recreational planning unless you're already standing near it. No fish species on record, no nearby peaks to anchor a hike, and the name suggests a functional origin more than a destination pond. If you're mapping every named water in the park, this one counts; if you're planning a weekend, you'll pass it on the way to somewhere else.
Schuylerville School Pond is a one-acre impoundment in the Lake George region — likely built as a teaching or demonstration pond for the local school district, though its current use and access status aren't publicly documented. Small ponds like this often serve as neighborhood skating rinks in winter or informal nature study sites, but without stocking records or public easement data, it's hard to say what anglers or paddlers might find here. If you're exploring the Lake George backcountry and come across this one, approach it as private unless posted otherwise — and don't expect the kind of wild water you'd find deeper in the Park.
Simpson Springs Reservoir is a one-acre pocket tucked somewhere in the broader Lake George Wild Forest — likely a former spring-fed source that fed private holdings or local infrastructure, now mapped but rarely discussed in current recreation literature. The name suggests 19th-century resource use (spring water for camps, estates, or small-scale farming), and the acre count puts it closer to a large vernal pool than a destination pond. No fish data on file, no trail signage pointing to it, no lean-to register mentions — this is the kind of water you find by accident on an old topo map or while bushwhacking between better-known routes. If you know where it is, you're likely the only one there.
Sly Pond holds 44 acres in the southeast corner of the Adirondack Park — Lake George Wild Forest territory, where the landscape shifts from big water and tourist infrastructure to quieter second-growth woods and seasonal camps. No fish species on record, which usually means limited access, private shoreline, or both; ponds this size in the Lake George region often sit behind seasonal residences or older club land with complicated right-of-way histories. Worth a DEC access inquiry if you're working the area — sometimes these mid-sized ponds surprise with a carry-in launch or an unmarked footpath from a nearby forest road.
Smith Pond is a 35-acre water in the Lake George region — small enough to feel remote, large enough to paddle without running out of shoreline in twenty minutes. No fish species data on record, which typically means either unstocked or unmaintained by DEC — not uncommon for ponds in this zone that sit between the Wild Forest classifications and private holdings. The Lake George Wild Forest trail system weaves through this area, but without documented access points or maintained campsites, Smith Pond reads more like a local-knowledge spot than a marked destination. Worth checking the DEC unit management plan if you're trying to reach it on foot.
South Bay forms the southern arm of Lake George — a 935-acre basin separated from the main lake by a narrow channel near the Montcalm Street bridge in Lake George Village. The bay is effectively a distinct body of water: shallower and warmer than the main lake, lined with seasonal docks and camps, and sheltered enough that it's often calmer when the main lake is whitecapping. It's a boat-access fishery (no dedicated launch on the bay itself; use Million Dollar Beach or Hague), and while the DEC has no current species data on file, the bay historically holds warmwater species that favor the shallow, weedy structure. South Bay Brook enters from the southeast — a thermal refuge in summer and a known spawning tributary.
Spectacle Pond is a 6-acre pocket water in the Lake George Wild Forest — small enough that it doesn't draw crowds, large enough to paddle if you can get a kayak in. No fish stocking records on file, which often means brookies if it connects to inlet flow, or nothing but frogs and damselflies if it's spring-fed and isolated. The name suggests a figure-eight or twin-lobed shape when seen from above, though most Adirondack "Spectacle" waters earned the tag from 19th-century mapmakers with binoculars and imagination. Access details are sparse; if you're hunting it down, start with the Lake George Wild Forest Unit Management Plan and a USGS quad.
Spectacle Ponds — a 17-acre water tucked into the eastern Lake George Wild Forest — sits far enough off the main corridor that it sees quiet mornings even in July. The name suggests twin ponds or maybe a figure-eight shoreline, but without maintained access or trail signage from DEC, most visitors arrive by bushwhack or old logging trace. No fish stocking records and no angler reports in the file, which either means the pond doesn't hold fish or nobody's bothered to document what's there. If you're hunting solitude in the Lake George region and don't mind working for it, this is the kind of water that rewards the effort.
Spruce Pond is a nine-acre pocket water in the Lake George region — small enough that it won't show up on most highway maps, quiet enough that it registers as a dot on the USGS quad and little else. No fish stocking records, no maintained trail chatter, no DEC camping infrastructure in the immediate vicinity — the kind of pond that exists in the overlap between private parcels and state forest, more useful as a landmark for hunters or a bushwhack waypoint than a paddling destination. If you're sorting through the Lake George Wild Forest inventory looking for solitude over amenities, Spruce Pond fits the brief — but confirm access and ownership boundaries before you commit to the map coordinates.
Stevenson's Pond is a one-acre pocket of water in the Lake George region — small enough that it likely sits on private land or functions as a seasonal wetland rather than a destination fishery. No fish species on record, no nearby trails or peaks in the directory, which suggests it's either a named feature on older maps that predates modern recreation infrastructure or a residential pond that carries a historical surname. Waters this size in the Lake George corridor tend to be relics of 19th-century settlement — mill ponds, estate features, or bog margins that earned a name and kept it. Worth confirming access and ownership before planning a visit.
The Old Fly is a three-acre pocket pond in the Lake George Wild Forest — small enough that most paddlers blow past it without a second look, but the name alone suggests old-time use, likely tied to brook trout fishing before the area was logged over. No formal access or maintained trail on record; reaching it means bushwhacking or following informal hunter paths through second-growth hardwoods. The pond sits in the kind of low-ridge terrain that defines the southern Adirondacks — not dramatic, not remote, but quiet in a way that feels earned. No fish data on file, which usually means either nothing or small wild brookies that haven't been surveyed in decades.
Three Ponds sits in the northwest corner of the Lake George Wild Forest — a 23-acre water that reads more remote than its access would suggest, tucked into second-growth hardwoods with no maintained trail system and no formal boat launch. The name implies three distinct basins, though water levels and beaver activity over the years have blurred the lines; what you find depends on the season and the decade. No fish stocking records on file, which usually means natural brookies or nothing at all — local anglers will know which. This is a bushwhack destination or a local secret, not a trailhead feature — plan accordingly.
Thurber Pond is a 30-acre water in the Lake George region — small enough to stay off the radar, large enough to feel like more than a roadside puddle. No fish species data on record, which usually means it's either too shallow for stocking programs or it holds native brook trout that nobody's bothered to survey. The name suggests old timber-era use (Thurber was a common surname among 19th-century logging foremen in Warren County), but beyond that the pond keeps its secrets. Best approach: check the DEC Lake George Wild Forest unit map for access routes — most ponds in this district connect to the trail system via unmarked woods roads or seasonal foot traffic.
Vandenburg Pond is a three-acre tuck in the Lake George Wild Forest — small enough that it never made the stocking rotation and quiet enough that most paddlers cruise past without noticing. No formal trail designation on current DEC maps, which means access is either a bushwhack or a local's line that hasn't been formalized. These micro-ponds in the Lake George region tend to hold pickerel or resident brook trout if the inlet stays cold through July, but without stocking records or angler reports, it's a roll of the dice. Worth checking the Wild Forest unit map for access corridors if you're already in the area with a light canoe and a tolerance for overgrown approaches.
Viele Pond is a 28-acre water tucked into the southern edge of the Adirondack Park in the Lake George region — small enough to hold its privacy, large enough to paddle without circling back on yourself in ten minutes. No fish data on record, which usually means either unstocked or under-surveyed; either way, it's more of a quiet-water destination than a fishing stop. The pond sits in the lower-elevation transition zone where the Park begins to blur into the valleys and farmland to the south — less dramatic than the High Peaks corridor, more accessible than the remote ponds in the central wilderness. Check local access and ownership before launching; many smaller ponds in this region sit on mixed public-private land.
Wall Street Pond is a one-acre pocket water in the Lake George region — small enough that it rarely appears on recreational maps and likely holds more interest as a named feature than as a paddling or fishing destination. No species data on record, which typically means minimal stocking history and limited angling pressure, if any. Waters this size in the southern Adirondacks often sit on private land or in mixed-ownership corridors where public access isn't formalized — confirm ownership and legal entry before bushwhacking in.
Wolf Pond is a one-acre pocket of water in the Lake George region — small enough that most maps skip it, quiet enough that it holds its name more as a geographic marker than a destination. No fish species data on record, no formal trail system leading in, no lean-to or designated campsite pulling traffic. It's the kind of water you find by accident or intention while bushwhacking between better-known landmarks, worth a quick look if you're already in the area but not worth the drive on its own.