Every named river in the Adirondack Park — the Hudson, the Moose, the Raquette, the Sacandaga, and the rivers that drain the High Peaks.
Moose Creek drains north through the Long Lake Wild Forest — a classic backcountry tributary in the Central Adirondacks that sees far less traffic than the headline rivers but holds the same character: cold, tea-stained water, beaver activity, and the kind of silence that defines the interior. The creek traces a drainage between low-ridge timber country; access typically means bushwhacking or following old logging roads that may or may not still be passable. No fish surveys on file, but these remote feeder streams often hold native brookies in the deeper runs and pools where the canopy keeps the water cold through summer. Worth a look if you're already in the Long Lake backcountry and comfortable navigating without a marked trail.