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.
Karl's Path is a short 0.2-mile connector that likely links other routes or facilities within a trail network. At this length, it functions more as a passage between points than a destination hike. Check current trailhead resources for its specific role in the local system.
Kayuta Heights Lane is a very short connector measuring just 0.1 miles in the Adirondack trail network. At this length, it's likely a brief link between trailheads, access roads, or nearby trail segments rather than a destination in itself. Check current maps to see what it connects — these short segments often provide key access to longer routes.
Keck Trail runs 3.5 miles through terrain that sees light to moderate use compared to the park's more trafficked routes. The length makes it suitable for a half-day outing, though conditions and elevation change will dictate actual hiking time. Check locally for current trailhead access and whether the trail connects to other routes in its network.
The Konkie Trail covers just two-tenths of a mile, making it one of the shortest named routes in the region. At this length, it likely serves as a connector or spur rather than a destination hike in its own right. Expect a walk measured in minutes, not hours.