St. Regis Canoe Area

If the Adirondack Park has a wild heart, it must beat somewhere deep in the Blue Ridge Wilderness.

Blue Ridge Wilderness
at a Glance

Size: 47,848 acres

First Designated: 1972

Unit Management Plan Status: Completed in 2006; draft amendment proposed in 2018

Special Regulations: None; standard Forest Preserve regulations are in effect

This area, which is nearly 48,000 acres in size, barely misses the park’s geographic center, skewing just a short distance to the southwest of that mark. But in many ways it is the region’s quintessential wilderness: vast, serene, and much of it seemingly untouched.

There is no doubt this area is aptly named; Blue Ridge, the mountain, spans at least half the width of its namesake wilderness. This multi-summited massif is seldom visited, both because of its remoteness and its lack of views. For most visitors, the mountain is merely the backdrop to several of the scenic ponds in its northern foothills, lurking far beyond the reach of any trail.

The shape of the Blue Ridge Wilderness is somewhat peculiar, with a vast western half that tapers to near nothingness as it extends eastward, almost to the hamlet of Indian Lake. On a map it looks vaguely like a giant whale, its maw prepared to snap on poor Lake Kora. In more practical terms, this size differential means that the eastern and western ends of the wilderness also provide different experiences, as well as somewhat different forested environments.

Despite its central location within the Adirondack Park, the Blue Ridge Wilderness is often overlooked by hikers, backpackers, and people of the sporting variety. Even the team of park planners who proposed the first wilderness areas in 1962 overlooked it at first; its potential was not recognized until a few years later. But this low-key nature is perhaps one of the Blue Ridge Wilderness Area’s best assets, for except at a few key locations solitude is a very good possibility.

Please click through the tabs below to learn more about the Blue Ridge Wilderness.

Watercolor painting of a forest with tall green pine trees and a grassy hill in the foreground.

Maps of the Blue Ridge Wilderness and the Surrounding Area

At left is the current DEC map of the wilderness and its facilities. The remaining maps show the evolution of the area from 1879 through 1954: lakeside hotels coming and going, and the roads that faded into faint trails. Click maps to enlarge.

Blue Ridge Wilderness Map

1879-1890 Blue Ridge Comparison Map

1903 Raquette Lake USGS Quad

1903 Blue Mountain USGS Quad

1954 Raquette Lake USGS Quad

1954 Blue Mountain USGS Quad

Blue Ridge Wilderness Image Gallery


Logo of Adirondack Wilderness Advocates featuring mountains, pine trees, and the organization's name.