Every named stream in the Adirondack Park — the feeder waters that line the High Peaks valleys and fill the ponds.
Fayville Creek feeds into the Great Sacandaga Lake system — one of dozens of tributary streams that drain the low hills and farmland edges of the southern Adirondacks into the reservoir. The name suggests a settlement or crossroads that predates the 1930 damming of the Sacandaga River, likely a hamlet swallowed or bypassed when the lake filled. No fish data on record, and the creek doesn't carry the kind of trout-water reputation that pulls anglers off the main lake. Access and current conditions unknown — if you're poking around the Sacandaga backcountry, treat it as exploratory.
Frenchman Creek drains into the Great Sacandaga Lake from the north — one of dozens of small tributaries that feed the reservoir, most of them too shallow and seasonal to hold much beyond the spring runoff. The name suggests old settlement or logging-era mapping, but the creek itself stays off the radar: no formal access, no fish stocking records, no reason to visit unless you're launching from a private parcel or poking around the reservoir shoreline by boat. If you're hunting wild brookies in the Sacandaga basin, you'll do better on the larger inlet streams to the west — Batchellerville Creek or Hans Creek — where flow holds through summer and there's actual public parking.
Frink Brook is one of the smaller, unnamed-on-most-maps tributaries in the Great Sacandaga Lake drainage — the kind of stream that shows up as a blue thread on a topo but rarely gets mentioned in trail guides or fishing reports. It feeds into the reservoir system that defines this southern gateway to the Adirondacks, where the network of brooks and inlets is as much about watershed management as it is about wilderness character. No established trailheads or formal access points here; this is mostly private-land stream corridor with the occasional culvert crossing on secondary roads. If you're looking for brook trout water or off-the-grid exploring in this region, you're better off heading north into the southern Adirondack hills where state land and fishable tributaries start to open up.
Fulmer Creek drains into the Great Sacandaga Lake system — one of dozens of smaller tributaries that feed the reservoir's sprawling 29-mile shoreline. The creek itself sees little traffic compared to the lake's marinas and campgrounds, but it's part of the patchwork of streams that shaped the original Sacandaga Valley before the Conklingville Dam flooded it in 1930. No published fish data, no formal access points — this is backcountry drainage, not a named destination. If you're poking around the shoreline or studying old USGS maps of the pre-reservoir valley, you'll find Fulmer Creek on paper more than on the ground.