The Outdoors · Capital Region
Grafton Lakes Turns the Plateau Into a Four-Season Park Town
Grafton Lakes brings six ponds, Long Pond beach, trout water, trail miles, and winter use to a forested Rensselaer plateau.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Grafton Lakes gives Grafton a public image that a rural hilltown label cannot carry by itself. The park sits on the forested plateau between the Taconic and Hudson Valleys, with nearly 2,500 acres, six ponds, Long Pond’s sandy beach, trout fishing in Long, Second, and Shaver ponds, canoe and rowboat launches, and about 25 miles of trails.
The winter list matters too: snowmobiling, snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, ice skating, and ice fishing when conditions allow. Grafton is a town where upland water and seasonal outdoor routines do a lot of identity work.
That helps explain the town’s feel. It is a plateau place with ponds, woods, beach days, winter trails, and enough public land to pull people up the hill in more than one season.
For local life, the park becomes background rhythm: summer swimming, winter conditions, fishing plans, trail habits, and the way weather can feel different on higher ground. Grafton Lakes makes the town easier to picture while still leaving room for the farms, homes, and back roads around it.
It also gives the plateau a social center. People may arrive for different reasons, but the ponds and trails keep drawing the town’s outdoor story back to the same high, wooded ground.