Town & Country Magazine: Subscribe
Contact Valerie Wilson Travel, our exclusive agent
Balancing tourism with preservation

The Adirondacks

A lifelong Aidorndacker revels in the rugged beauty and unspoiled natural wonders of the six-million-acre park.

By Eliza Scott Harris
Print The Adirondacks
Billy Curtis and his son at the Mirror Lake Inn.The boathouse at the Point, an exceptional small hotel, once the Great Camp of William Avery Rockefeller.An inviting hammock set in a stand of towering white pines.With its imposing fieldstone fireplace and exposed hand-carved wood beams, the Point's great room is a masterpiece of Adirondack rustic style.An early-morning cruise on Lake Placid.The romantic exterior of the Lake Placid Lodge.Fly-fishing guides Steve Reynolds and Brooks Hornaday, his finacée.
Billy Curtis and his son at the Mirror Lake Inn.
PHOTO: Ken Kochey
The boathouse at the Point, an exceptional small hotel, once the Great Camp of William Avery Rockefeller.
PHOTO: Ken Kochey
An inviting hammock set in a stand of towering white pines.
PHOTO: Ken Kochey
With its imposing fieldstone fireplace and exposed hand-carved wood beams, the Point's great room is a masterpiece of Adirondack rustic style.
PHOTO: Ken Kochey
An early-morning cruise on Lake Placid.
PHOTO: Ken Kochey
The romantic exterior of the Lake Placid Lodge.
PHOTO: Ken Kochey
Fly-fishing guides Steve Reynolds and Brooks Hornaday, his finacée.
PHOTO: Ken Kochey
Print The Adirondacks
  
DESTINATIONS
INSPIRATIONS
TRAVEL SMART
ADVERTISEMENT