Every named stream in the Adirondack Park — the feeder waters that line the High Peaks valleys and fill the ponds.
Jenkins Brook threads through the forested lowlands of the Tupper Lake region — one of dozens of small tributaries that feed the Raquette River watershed without drawing much attention from guidebooks or trail maps. No formal access points or designated campsites, but the brook is typical of the quieter waters in this part of the Park: slow current, tea-colored from tannins, bordered by mixed hardwoods and the occasional hemlock stand. If you're paddling the Raquette or poking around the backroads near Tupper Lake, you'll cross Jenkins Brook on a culvert or see it marked on the DeLorme — a named water, but not a destination.
Jock Pond Outlet drains Jock Pond northwest toward the Raquette River drainage in the Tupper Lake Wild Forest — a backcountry stream that moves through mixed hardwood and conifer without road or trail crossings for most of its run. The outlet doesn't appear on most recreation maps, and there's no maintained access or stocking record, which keeps it in the category of waters you stumble across while bushwhacking or paddling deeper into the drainage rather than waters you plan a trip around. Brook trout are possible in the upper reaches if the gradient and substrate hold, but without survey data it's speculation. If you're headed to Jock Pond itself, you'll cross or parallel the outlet depending on your route in.
Jocks Pond Outlet drains Jocks Pond northwest into the Raquette River drainage — one of dozens of small tributary streams in the working forest between Tupper Lake and Piercefield that mostly see attention from anglers who know the pond above or hunters walking the old haul roads that cross the flow. The outlet runs through mixed softwood before meeting larger water; typical for these remote feeders, access is by bushwhack or unmarked logging track, and the stream itself is narrow enough to step across in late summer. No fish data on record, but if the pond holds brookies, the outlet likely sees spawning runs in fall. This is lowland Adirondack drainage country — bug season, black spruce, and quiet.
Jordan River flows through the Tupper Lake region as one of the quieter, less-documented streams in the northwestern Adirondacks — not a destination water, but part of the working drainage that feeds the lakes and wetlands around the village. No fish species data on record, no maintained trail access worth noting, and no obvious put-in for paddlers looking to add it to a trip log. If you're mapping tributaries or chasing connectivity in this part of the Park, it's on the list; otherwise, it stays off the itinerary. The name suggests some old survey or settlement logic, but the river itself keeps a low profile.