Fulton Chain of Lakes
{{Short description|String of eight lakes in the Adirondack Park in upstate New York, U.S.}}
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The Fulton Chain of Lakes is a string of eight lakes located in the Adirondack Park in upstate New York, United States. The chain is the dammed-up Moose River, and the dam which creates the chain holds back nearly {{convert|6.8|e9USgal|m3}} of water.{{cite web|last1=Huther|title=Fulton Chain of Lakes in the Adirondacks}} The lakes are located in Herkimer and Hamilton Counties. Inlet, Old Forge, and Eagle Bay are towns on them. The chain begins near Old Forge and ends before it reaches Raquette Lake. The lakes are named for Robert Fulton, inventor of the steamboat, who proposed connecting the lakes to create an Adirondack canal. They are suitable for pontoon boats (the most popular type in the area), kayaks, and motorboats. The chain is part of the {{convert|740|mi|adj=on}} Northern Forest Canoe Trail, which begins on First Lake and ends in Fort Kent, Maine.
== Geography ==
The lakes in the chain have been given ordinal designations: First Lake, Second Lake, Third Lake, Fourth Lake, Fifth Lake, Sixth Lake, Seventh Lake, and Eighth Lake. The chain begins with a small lake not counted in the series called Old Forge Pond. In reality, First, Second and Third Lake are one long lake separated by narrow straits. At the east end of Fourth Lake, by Inlet in Hamilton County, a stream, or channel, allows access to the small Fifth Lake. A portage is necessary to arrive at Sixth Lake, which is also connected by a narrow strait to Seventh Lake. Another portage is required to gain access to Eighth Lake.
Beyond Eighth Lake is Raquette Lake and another string of lakes in Indian Lake, New York.
= Expansions in 1798 =
File:Annual report of the Forest Commission of the State of New York (1894) (19177870649).jpg
The lakes were expanded from {{convert|2762|acre|km2|0}} to {{convert|3481|acre|km2|0}} in 1798 when the Moose River was dammed at Old Forge.{{cite web |url=http://www.history.rochester.edu/canal/bib/whitford/1906/Chap09.html |title=History of the Canal System of the State of New York |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081002035436/http://www.history.rochester.edu/canal/bib/whitford/1906/Chap09.html |archivedate=2008-10-02 }}http://fultonchainoflakesassociation.org/ Fulton Chain of Lakes Association The present dam at Old Forge holds back {{convert|6.8|e9USgal|m3}} of water. This reservoir is managed by the HR-BR Regulating District. In the late 1800s, the State Water Power Commissioner made an agreement with Fulton Chain cottage owners and recreational users to maintain the water level during the summer season, an agreement still in effect.[http://www.inletny.com/template.asp?type=act&det=boat www.inletny.com - Boating] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060428095115/http://www.inletny.com/template.asp?type=act&det=boat |date=2006-04-28 }}{{Cite web|url=http://www.adirondacktravel.com/boating.html|title = Boating and Canoeing the Adirondack Mountains, Old Forge, NY}}
Recreation
Prior to World War II, the town of Inlet boasted fourteen Adirondack hotels. The Woods Inn is now the only historic hotel remaining open year round.{{Cite web|url=http://thewoodsinn.com/history/|title=History ⋆ The Woods Inn|website=The Woods Inn|language=en-US|access-date=2019-05-16}} Boating is a popular activity in the Fulton Chain of Lakes because any aspects of the lakes are accessible by water. For example, the restaurants of The Woods Inn, Great Pines (Formerly Northwoods Inn), Daikers, and the Screamen Eagle are all accessible by boat, you can also get to Inlet and Old Forge by boat. A very popular type of boat in the Adirondacks is the pontoon boat because many people enjoy relaxing on the lakes. Also fishing boats because of the vast numbers of types of fish and areas of the lakes to be able to fish. The lakes sport decent populations of gamefish including northern pike, lake trout, rainbow trout, brook trout, landlocked (Atlantic) salmon, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, yellow perch, brown bullhead, tiger muskie and various panfish. Tubing, skiing, knee boarding, and wake boarding are all common water recreational activities that are seen while on the Fulton Chain of Lakes.{{cite web|title=The Adirondacks|publisher=Films for the Humanities and Sciences}} In addition to boating, snowmobiling is also very popular in the region during the Winter. Although the Fulton Chain of Lakes are not technically part of the snowmobile trails, once frozen many snowmobilers use them to access the same restaurants noted above.
Adirondack Canoe Classic
The Fulton Chain is the start of the Adirondack Canoe Classic, a three-day, {{convert|90|mi|km|adj=on}} canoe race. This canoe race is for anyone from beginners to experts, it is a way to get the community together and to get everyone involved with something. Many kids (usually older kids) will go with their parents and form a team. Many people train very hard for this 90 mile race, however some teams just go out there for the comradery of it all and just to have fun with friends. However, it is a rigorous course and includes three days of physical activity and hard work for participants.[{{cite web|title= The Adirondacks|publisher=Films for the Humanities and Sciences}}]
Hiking
Hiking is a popular activity in the Adirondack Park because of the high numbers and varieties of hikes available.{{fact|date=March 2022}} Some of the varieties of hikes include anything from the High Peaks to the relatively flat hikes of Sis and Bub.{{fact|date=March 2022}} Bald Mountain is one of the most popular mountains to hike not only by the Fulton Chain of Lakes but also in the Adirondacks as a whole due to the views of the entire chain.{{fact|date=March 2022}} At the top of this mountain there is the Rondaxe Fire Tower that has been restored to allow hikers to climb to the top of it in order to enhance the views of the Fulton Chain of Lakes.{{fact|date=March 2022}} Sis and Bub lakes is a relatively flat hike, it has some inclination however it is nothing too drastic.{{or-inline|date=March 2022}} This hike is good for families with younger children because it is not very rigorous or challenging.{{or-inline|date=March 2022}} Another hike is the Sis, Bub, and Moss Lake trail, it is a full loop that connects Sis and Bub lakes to Moss Lake, this hike is very suitable{{says who?|date=March 2022}} for families and is primarily flat.{{cite book|title=Fulton Chain Wild Forest|publisher=CNY Hiking}}{{nonspecific|date=March 2022}}
Surrounding towns
Inlet is located at the “head of Fourth Lake” and this is where it gets its name from because it is near the inlet of the fourth of the eight lakes. Inlet is a small town that includes Kalil’s Grocery Store, a post office, a realtor’s office, restaurants, other stores and a baseball field. Many of the businesses in the town are family owned and run.{{cite web|last1=Herr|first1=Charles|title=Inlet History}}
Eagle Bay is a small town that is also located on Fourth lake and includes a neighborhood full of cabins. The town includes restaurants, a laundromat, and a fire station. The neighborhood of Eagle Bay is a small, quaint place where the homes are on mainly square plots set back in the woods, however some of them are waterfront. There are two community beaches that are accessible to homeowners of the neighborhood, as well as boat slips that are available for purchase with the property.{{cite web|title=Eagle Bay Village}}
Old Forge is the biggest of the three towns adjacent to the lakes and is also located at the beginning of the Fulton Chain of Lakes, by the Old Forge Pond. In Old Forge there are grocery stores, restaurants, souvenir stores, realtors offices, and a fire station. Old Forge is a well known town all throughout the Adirondacks and especially around the Fulton Chain of Lakes. There is also a motel located right above the Old Forge Pond. A well-known water park called Enchanted Forest Water Safari is a very popular tourist attraction in Old Forge and is the largest water park in New York state.{{cite web|title=Old Forge in the Adirondacks}}
References
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Category:Reservoirs in Hamilton County, New York
Category:Reservoirs in Herkimer County, New York
Category:Tourist attractions in Hamilton County, New York
Category:Tourist attractions in Herkimer County, New York