
FREE Fishing E-Brochure - Click Here
WHETHER you wish to float a fly or soak a worm, cast from shore or
troll the depths, your water waits.
Over 56 thousand acres of lakes and ponds and 1700 miles of rivers
and streams comprise a wilderness fishery of enormous breadth. You'll
find an ancient strain of Adirondack brook trout and hybrid tiger
muskies. Small mouth and largemouth bass abound. There are toothy
northerns, lunker lakers, big brown trout and panfish galore.
When two feet of ice covers the lakes, the fishing heats up again.
EVERY autumn when nature shows her colors across nearly a million
readily and easily accessible acres of mountainsides, forest and wetlands
thoughts turn to rifles and bows, shotguns and muzzleloaders.
Black bear and whitetail deer are the big game here. Wild turkeys are
commonplace now. Ruffed grouse, woodcock and snowshoe hare
round out many a bag. Wood ducks, mallards, blacks and Canada
geese call the waterfowler.
ADIRONDACK guides, comfortable lodges, friendly marinas and
well-stocked shops have served Hamilton County sportsmen and
women for nearly two centuries.
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