Every named river in the Adirondack Park — the Hudson, the Moose, the Raquette, the Sacandaga, and the rivers that drain the High Peaks.
Kayaderosserass Creek flows into the Great Sacandaga Lake system — a tributary name that survives from the Mohawk language, though the exact translation is lost to competing local theories. The creek drains a modest watershed in the southern Adirondacks, where the terrain flattens out and the forest gives way to mixed hardwoods and scattered residential development along the reservoir's southern arms. No formal access points are documented, and fish data is absent from DEC records — likely a function of the creek's small size and proximity to more productive Sacandaga tributaries. If you're poking around the lake's southern shoreline by kayak, you'll find the mouth where the old topography dictated it.
Kayaderosserass Creek feeds into the Great Sacandaga Lake system — one of those tributary streams that shows up on USGS quads but doesn't turn up in fishing reports or trail guides. The name carries Mohawk lineage (the region was Mohawk hunting ground before the Sacandaga Reservoir flooded the valley in 1930), and the creek likely drains a mix of second-growth hardwood and wetland before reaching the lake. No public access markers or designated pull-offs on record — if you're tracking it down, you're working from a topo map and a hunch. Most anglers skip the tributaries entirely and fish the main body of the lake for walleye, northern pike, and panfish.