2,251 named trails across 6,238 miles of mapped centerlines — every state-managed corridor and community-mapped path in the Adirondack Park, cross- referenced with trailheads, lean-tos, parking, and the peaks they climb. Use the map to get your bearings, then narrow the list by region, operator, or what the trail reaches.
Gilead North is a half-mile mountain bike trail offering a quick link or loop option within its network. At 0.8 kilometers, it's brief enough to ride as a connector between longer segments or as part of a warm-up lap. Best treated as a utility trail rather than a destination ride.
Gilead South is a short connector route in what appears to be a bike trail network, running just under half a kilometer. At this length, it likely serves as a link between longer segments rather than a destination in itself. Check local trail maps for the broader system it connects to and whether it's part of a larger loop or network ride.
Gooley Club Road runs 2.6 miles through what was once private club land in the western Adirondacks, now part of the Boreas Ponds Tract. The route follows a historic access road with gentle grades suitable for hiking, skiing, or mountain biking depending on season and conditions. It connects to the broader trail network serving Boreas Ponds and the Hudson River headwaters.
This short but demanding herdpath follows Griffin Brook upward through a steep slide scar, requiring careful route-finding and scrambling over exposed rock. At just over a mile, it's a quick approach by Adirondack standards, but the terrain is unforgiving—expect loose rock, wet conditions after rain, and sections where hands are necessary. Best treated as a technical objective rather than a casual walk, and typically used by climbers or peak-baggers comfortable navigating unmarked alpine terrain.