Every named stream in the Adirondack Park — the feeder waters that line the High Peaks valleys and fill the ponds.
Ferguson Brook drains through the eastern Lake George watershed — one of dozens of small tributary streams that feed the lake from the surrounding ridges and valleys. No fish data on record, no mapped trail access, no DEC camping infrastructure in the immediate corridor. It's the kind of stream that shows up on the USGS quad as a blue line and in the regional hydrology as a seasonal meltwater contributor, but not as a destination — a named water in the directory for completeness, not because you're planning a trip around it.
Flately Brook flows through the southeastern edge of the Adirondack Park in the Lake George region — a modest tributary system where the park transitions into the more settled terrain around the south basin of the lake. No fish surveys on record, no maintained trail access in the DEC inventory, and no nearby High Peaks to anchor a day hike — this is working landscape, not backcountry destination. If you're bushwhacking or poking around old logging roads in the area, you'll cross it; otherwise, it's the kind of water that shows up on the map but not in trip reports.
Fly Creek drains into the southwestern basin of Lake George — one of dozens of small feeder streams that trace the wooded slopes between the lake and the interior ridges. Nofish data on record, which usually signals either intermittent flow or a headwater run too small and steep to hold a resident population. The stream shares a name with Fly Pond (south-central Adirondacks, near Piseco), but the two systems have no connection — just a reminder that the Park recycles place names freely. If you're bushwhacking the drainage, expect thick laurel on the lower slopes and a narrow, rocky channel that runs hard in April and quiets to a trickle by August.
Fryer Brook drains the low hills west of Lake George, likely feeding into Northwest Bay or one of its tributaries — a seasonal flow that runs hard in spring and early summer, then pulls back to a trickle by August. No known angling, no trail along the corridor, and no reason to seek it out unless you're bushwhacking ridgelines in the area and cross it by accident. The brook lives in that gray zone between named water and unnamed drainage — on the map, but not on anyone's itinerary. If you're after moving water in the Lake George basin, look instead to Shelving Rock Brook or the inlet streams at the lake's northern end.