The Outdoors · Adirondacks & North Country
Adirondack Boat Days Start With Clean, Drain, Dry
For lakes around Inlet, Long Lake, and Lake Pleasant, DEC's clean-drain-dry rules and boat-steward checks are part of normal launch planning.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
A boat day in the Adirondacks has a small ritual before the launch. DEC tells boaters to clean, drain, and dry boats and equipment to help prevent aquatic invasive species from moving between waters.
That can feel like one more chore when everyone wants to get on the lake, but it is part of the Adirondack lake story now. DEC has also announced Adirondack-specific requirements for motorized boats tied to inspection and decontamination expectations near Adirondack waters. Around Inlet, Long Lake, Lake Pleasant, and other lake towns, launch planning is about more than parking and weather.
Bring the drain plug out while transporting, remove visible plants and mud, know where inspection or decontamination stations are, and leave extra time at busy launches. It protects the water and prevents an avoidable problem at the ramp. The lake day still gets to be fun; the clean-drain-dry habit just becomes part of packing, right beside fuel, snacks, life jackets, and the weather check.
Use the current DEC page as part of packing, especially if the boat has been in another lake recently. If a steward or sign points you to inspection or decontamination, build that time into the plan instead of treating it as a surprise at the launch.