Every named stream in the Adirondack Park — the feeder waters that line the High Peaks valleys and fill the ponds.
Raquette Brook flows through the southern Adirondacks near Indian Lake — part of the broader Raquette River watershed that drains a significant portion of the central Park. The stream sees limited angler attention and no formal DEC stocking records, though native brook trout are likely present in the headwater tributaries if the gradient and canopy are right. Access details are sparse; this is working forest and private inholding country, where stream corridors aren't always marked or maintained for public use. If you're looking for Raquette Brook specifically, confirm access and boundaries with the Indian Lake town office or a local outfitter before you bushwhack.
Roaring Brook flows through the Indian Lake town corridor — one of several small tributaries in the central Adirondacks that carries snowmelt and summer rain down from the ridgelines into the Cedar River or Hudson drainage. The name suggests steep gradient and noisy spring runoff, though without recorded fishery data or maintained access points, this is likely a bushwhack proposition for anglers or a crossing for backcountry skiers working the high country between trail systems. The Indian Lake region holds dozens of these named brooks and feeder streams — most appear on the DEC quad maps but few see regular foot traffic outside hunting season. Worth noting if you're plotting cross-country routes or studying watershed flow for a paddling trip downstream.
Round Pond Brook drains east from Round Pond in the Town of Indian Lake — a backcountry drainage in the central Adirondacks where named streams often connect modest ponds to larger watersheds with little fanfare and less foot traffic. No fish data on record, no maintained trail system flagged to the brook itself, and the kind of obscurity that keeps it off both the hatchery truck routes and the weekend itinerary. If you're bushwhacking the drainage or working a topo sheet between Round Pond and the Cedar River corridor, you'll cross it — otherwise it stays a blue line on the map. Check DEC wetland and wild forest classifications before planning any access.
Round Pond Brook drains the high country south of Indian Lake village — a small tributary system feeding into the Cedar River drainage, tucked into the west-central backcountry where named streams outnumber maintained trails. No fish stocking records, no formal access points, and no lean-tos within the immediate watershed; this is working forest and remote wetland, the kind of water that appears on a USGS quad but rarely sees foot traffic outside hunting season. If you're headed into this zone, you're navigating by compass and contour lines, not trail signs. The brook itself is likely intermittent in summer, fast and cold during snowmelt.