Every named stream in the Adirondack Park — the feeder waters that line the High Peaks valleys and fill the ponds.
Douglass Creek runs through the Old Forge corridor — one of dozens of named tributaries that feed the Moose River watershed and the Fulton Chain drainage. No public species data on file, but most small streams in this drainage hold native brook trout in the headwater stretches and fall-run browns closer to the river confluence. Old Forge sits at the western edge of the Park's canoe country; if Douglass Creek connects to any established paddle route or trail crossing, it's likely unmarked and known only by local anglers working upstream from the Moose. Worth a topo check if you're prospecting small water in the area.
Drunkard Creek drains northwest through the Old Forge corridor — one of dozens of small tributaries that feed the Moose River watershed between town and the western High Peaks. The name holds, like most Adirondack creek names, but the specifics are lost to local memory and inconsistent mapmaking; it appears on some USGS quads and vanishes from others. No fish surveys on record, no formal trail access, no reason to seek it out unless you're connecting drainage lines on a topo map or bushwhacking between better-known water. Most visitors to Old Forge never hear the name.