Every named stream in the Adirondack Park — the feeder waters that line the High Peaks valleys and fill the ponds.
Lindsey Brook runs through the Paradox Lake basin — part of the northeast Adirondack drainage system that feeds into the lake and eventually the Schroon River. The stream's name appears on USGS quads but little public documentation exists about access points, fishery potential, or trail crossings — it's one of dozens of tributaries in the region that serve more as watershed arteries than recreation destinations. If you're poking around the Paradox Lake shoreline or exploring old logging roads in the area, you might cross it; otherwise it's a map name more than a known feature. No fish data on file, no formal access, no reason to plan a trip around it.
Little Sally Brook drains north through the hills west of Paradox Lake — a minor tributary in a region better known for its eponymous lake and the iron mining history that shaped the valley. The stream runs through mixed hardwood forest and crosses under Paradox Lake Road somewhere in its lower reaches, though there's no formal access or trail infrastructure tied to the brook itself. It's the kind of water that shows up on a topo map but not in a guidebook — notable mostly for completing the drainage pattern between the upland hollows and the lake. No stocking records, no camping, no reason to seek it out unless you're piecing together the hydrology of the Paradox watershed.