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.
The QUFSD Trail covers 1.8 miles through terrain that remains largely undocumented in regional trail inventories. Without verified trailhead coordinates or maintained network affiliation, this route likely serves a specialized or local access function rather than general recreational use. Hikers seeking this trail should confirm current conditions and access permissions through local land management contacts before heading out.
Quick Back Trail (Orange) runs less than half a mile through terrain typical of shorter connector routes in the region. The orange blazing marks what appears to be a brief link or loop segment, though without additional context it's hard to say definitively what it connects to or whether it's part of a larger trail network. At 0.4 miles, it's a matter of minutes rather than hours—useful if you know the area, but you'll want a map to understand how it fits into your larger route.
Quick Lake Road appears in the trail registry with no recorded mileage, suggesting either an extremely short connector or an access road to Quick Lake. Without verified distance or difficulty data, it's likely a brief approach segment rather than a destination trail. Check local resources or recent trip reports for current conditions and actual routing details.