
Adirondack slide guide
By Adirondack Explorer
Avalanches pave paths to summits
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The Adirondack Explorer is a nonprofit magazine covering the Adirondack Park's environment, recreation and communities.
By Adirondack Explorer
Avalanches pave paths to summits
By Adirondack Explorer
The French called it Riviere au Sable, or “River of Sand.” If you happen to be fly fishing among the boulders in Wil-mington Notch, you might be puzzled by the name, but not if you’re paddling about the Ausable Delta on Lake Champlain.
By Adirondack Explorer
The Adirondack Park boasts three Owls Head Mountains with hiking trails—near the hamlets of Keene, Long Lake and Owls Head. The last peak, lying on the northern edge of the Park, is the least well-known, but for people who live or vacation in the vicinity it has been a favorite destination for years.
By Adirondack Explorer
Forget Edison, DaVinci and all those other folks. The true genius of the ages was the bloke who sat down one fine day and invented the vacation. By Mike Jarboe
By Adirondack Explorer
The Black River Wild Forest encompasses more than 121,000 acres, but it has just one trail leading to a summit—Woodhull Mountain.
By Adirondack Explorer
He kept pestering me with the same old question: “It's not whitewater, right?”
By Adirondack Explorer
I heard the call of the Adirondacks for years, but for just as long left it on hold. People kept on telling me that hiking was liberating and invigorating. Although I was sure it probably was all of that, I told them I usually avoid walking eight to 12 hours with sweaty, smelly companions.
By Adirondack Explorer
Ask a birdwatcher to name favorite places in the Adirondacks, and you’re almost certain to get an earful about Ferd’s Bog. This soggy, green corner of the Pigeon Lake Wilderness consists of 170 acres of fen and swamp. By Edward Kanze
By Adirondack Explorer
If you want your children to enjoy hiking, you need to start them off on the right foot. First, choose hikes they can handle. Don’t march them up Algonquin on their first outing.
By Adirondack Explorer
The Dial-Nippletop loop overlooking the Ausable Lakes valley has always been one of the most spectacular—albeit arduous—day hikes in the Adirondacks, but now it’s even better, thanks to a fire that raged out of control for more than a week last September.