• Happy Mathematics Day! ❌📐♾️

Are there any other states that provide a 'Lake Finder?'

I was unaware that Minnesota had such a resource available. I might have to make use of that sometime. Thanks for making me aware.


Alan
 
I'd heard of that Minnesota website but I never used it until the last couple weeks.
It has great info.
Fish species, lake size, depth, maps, water clarity, fish survey results, and invasive species alerts. I'm probably forgetting a few other things.
I looked at the New York site and it's helpful but not as good as the MN site in my opinion.
 
Wisconsin also has a lake finder. I haven't used it, but hope it's helpful

Thanks.
I looked t it briefly. Seems like there's some useful info.
I googled "Maine Lake Finder" and they have something similar but the MN finder has the best info, and is user friendly. There's a choice for using a mobile version too. I haven't tried it yet on my computer.

One thing I really like about the Maine finder is you can link it to Google Earth. It's pretty nice for locating lakes in particular areas of the state.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
The Adirondack Lake Survey Corporation compleeted a lake survey decades ago, going back to the days of high acid rain content. Although extremely dated, the basic physical characteristics and map location with depth contours probably haven't changed much. I wouldn't count on the chemical characteristics and fish species and populations to be extremely accurate, but some details may not have changed much. You take your chances.
 
Been using the MN DNR site for years, it's great. Let's me find remote BWCA stocked trout lakes which tend to hold some very nice trout.
 
Back
Top