Every named stream in the Adirondack Park — the feeder waters that line the High Peaks valleys and fill the ponds.
North Creek runs through the southwest corner of the Brant Lake region — a modest tributary system in a stretch of the park better known for lakes than streams. The creek feeds into the larger drainage that eventually connects to Schroon Lake, passing through private land and state forest, with access points scattered and generally unmarked. No fish stocking records and no maintained trail along the creek itself, which means this is more of a bushwhack corridor than a destination water. If you're here, you're likely crossing it en route to somewhere else or fishing downstream connections where the gradient flattens.
Northwest Bay Brook drains north into Northwest Bay on Lake George — a small tributary system in the Brant Lake township that feeds the lake's northwest corner near the town of Bolton. The stream runs through mixed hardwood and hemlock cover in a relatively undeveloped drainage; no formal trail access or DEC-maintained sites, but it's the kind of feeder creek that occasionally shows up on local topo maps and gets fished by anglers who know the Northwest Bay shoreline. No fish species data on file, which typically means it hasn't been surveyed or stocked in recent decades. If you're launching at Northwest Bay public access, the brook mouth is worth noting as a landmark — but this is local-knowledge water, not a named destination.