Every named stream in the Adirondack Park — the feeder waters that line the High Peaks valleys and fill the ponds.
Little Salman River is a small tributary drainage in the Saranac Lake region — one of those named streams that appears on DEC maps but rarely gets mentioned in trip reports or fishing logs. No public data on fish populations, and access likely means bushwhacking or following old logging routes rather than maintained trail. The river feeds into the broader Saranac watershed, part of the network of cold-water streams that lace through the northern Adirondacks between the High Peaks and the St. Regis Canoe Area. Worth knowing if you're studying drainage patterns or piecing together a remote bushwhack route — otherwise, it stays off most paddlers' and anglers' lists.
Little Salman River threads through the northern reaches of the Saranac Lake region — a small tributary system that most visitors drive over without noticing. The name appears on USGS quads and old survey maps, but there's no public access infrastructure and no fishing pressure to speak of; this is working forest, not recreation corridor. If you're scanning DEC atlases for overlooked brook trout water, Little Salman is the kind of stream that shows up as a blue line with no additional context — which means it either holds small wild fish in its headwater pockets or it doesn't hold much at all.