The Outdoors · Capital Region
Plotter Kill makes Rotterdam's edge steep and wild
Plotter Kill Preserve gives Rotterdam a rugged county preserve, Mohawk tributary gorge, waterfalls, trails, and plant diversity.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Rotterdam is often read through highways, suburbs, and old industry, but Plotter Kill Preserve gives the town a much steeper edge. Schenectady County says the preserve is in Rotterdam and contains nearly 645 acres of rugged hardwood and coniferous forest along the Plotter Kill, a tributary to the Mohawk River.
The same county materials describe more than seven miles of hiking, three waterfalls, steep slopes and ledges, and more than 600 plant species. That changes Rotterdam’s image in a good way. The town also has gorge terrain, spring wildflowers, winter ice, and a waterfall preserve close to the Mohawk.
Plotter Kill makes Rotterdam feel less flat and more surprising. A place many people know through roads and suburban edges suddenly has a rugged public landscape with water dropping through steep ground.
The preserve also keeps the Mohawk tributary story close. It is not scenery floating somewhere in the region; it is a named county preserve with trails, ledges, falls, and enough plant life to reward slower attention.
That is the local hook: Rotterdam has a wilder side hiding near the ordinary map, and Plotter Kill gives that side a name people can remember.