• Home
  • How We Work
  • Where We Work
  • News Room
  • About Us
  • My Nature Page

The Nature Conservancy in Africa - Conservation in Africa

The Nature Conservancy in Asia Pacific - Conservation in Asia-Pacific

The Nature Conservancy in the Caribbean - Conservation in the Caribbean

The Nature Conservancy in Central America - Conservation in Central America

The Nature Conservancy in North America - Conservation in North America

The Nature Conservancy in the United States - Conservation in the United States

The Nature Conservancy in South America - Conservation in South America

The Adirondack Nature Conservancy: Where We Work

 

Fall leaves © Carl Heilman II

Where We Work

The Adirondack Nature Conservancy

The Adirondack Nature Conservancy has protected over 556,500 acres since 1971. Click on the red dots to learn more about our preserves.

Places to Visit

Clintonville Pine Barrens
Everton Falls Preserve
Silver Lake Bog Preserve
Spring Pond Bog Preserve
Champlain Valley
      Coon Mountain Preserve
  Gadway Sandstone Pavement Barrens

Adirondack Stream ©Carl Heilman II


There are few places—if any—like the Adirondacks. At 6-million-acres, they are larger than Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon, and Olympic National Parks combined.

They harbor some of the best remaining examples of hardwood forests, bogs, lakes, rivers, alpine summits, and spruce-fir forests typical of the 31-million-acre northern forest that spans New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, and parts of southern Québec.

With 2,800 lakes and ponds and 30,000 miles of rivers and streams, the Adirondacks' aquatic resources are also extraordinary.

Because the Adirondacks are a mosaic of more than 2.5 million acres of publicly owned Forest Preserve lands intermingled with 3.5 million acres of private lands and small communities, they also provide a great model for how people and wildlands can coexist.

Many of our preserves are publicly accessible and equipped with trails, guides, and visitor areas

To find out more about our natural areas and how you can visit, please check out the preserve pages to the right and read our preserve visitation guidelines.

Gadway Sandstone Pavement Barrens Preserve Everton Falls Preserve Spring Pond Bog Silver Lake Bog Preserve Clintonville Pine Barrens Coon Mountain Preserve Lake George Land Conservancy Southern Lake Champlain Valley

 

 

 

Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © Carl Heilman II (Adirondack stream); Photo © Carl Heilman II (leaves).