Every named reservoir in the Adirondack Park — flood-control basins, drinking-water sources, and the impoundments anchoring the southern watersheds.
Lake Bonita is a 41-acre reservoir tucked into the southern Lake George region — a working impoundment rather than a natural basin, which explains both the geometric shoreline and the lack of public fisheries data. Access details are scarce in the standard references, and the water doesn't pull the same traffic as the named trout ponds or the Lake George shoreline itself. If you're hunting it down, expect private holdings around the perimeter and limited to no public launch infrastructure. Best confirmed locally before you load the kayak.
Lower Reservoir is a one-acre impoundment in the Lake George region — the kind of small utility water that appears on USGS quads but rarely in guide books. No fish data on record, no trails leading to it, no surrounding peaks to anchor a day hike. It's the sort of place you'd stumble onto while bushwhacking between named destinations or tracing old roads on a winter map session — present, mapped, but functionally off the recreational grid.