Every named river in the Adirondack Park — the Hudson, the Moose, the Raquette, the Sacandaga, and the rivers that drain the High Peaks.
Paradox Creek drains north from Paradox Lake through a narrow valley that defines the eastern edge of the Schroon Lake region — a working landscape of small farms, gravel roads, and low forested ridges rather than High Peaks drama. The creek's name comes from an 1800s geological curiosity: it flows north into the Schroon River (which flows south), creating a directional "paradox" that fascinated early surveyors more than it affects modern paddlers or anglers. The water moves quietly through mixed hardwoods and occasional beaver meadows, accessible at road crossings but rarely fished with intention. Best known now as a place-name and a regional landmark rather than a destination — the kind of creek you cross on the way to somewhere else.