Mount Arab Fire Tower Hike — Adirondacks
Mount Arab
Mount Arab is the kind of hike you want when you have a morning free and a small crew in tow — short, well-graded, and rewarding out of all proportion to the effort. Tucked into the forested country west of Tupper Lake, the trail climbs a single gentle mile to an open summit crowned by one of the more beloved fire towers in the park. The real bonus is the restored observer's cabin at the top: the former caretaker's quarters now serves as a small interpretive museum, often staffed in peak season by a volunteer happy to talk tower history, local ecology, or what to look for from the tower cab. Great for families, great for dogs, and great as a half-day outing on the drive to or from Tupper Lake.
From the trailhead on Mount Arab Road, the route climbs steadily through classic northern Adirondack hardwood forest — a mix of gradual grades and gentle switchbacks designed to soften what's really a 740-foot ascent. A couple of short steeper sections break up the rhythm, but nothing that demands hand-over-foot scrambling. The trail crosses the occasional rocky slab before topping out at the open summit clearing, where you'll find the restored steel fire tower and the adjacent observer's cabin. Climb the tower for panoramic views of Tupper Lake, Eagle Crag Lake, and the surrounding patchwork of ponds and forest, then duck into the cabin museum if a volunteer is on duty. The short mileage and easy grade make Arab one of the best family hikes in the park — and an excellent winter snowshoe when conditions allow.
The Mount Arab fire observation station was one of the classic Adirondack lookouts staffed for most of the 20th century, monitoring the forests between Tupper Lake and the St. Lawrence valley. When the state decommissioned the tower, the adjacent observer's cabin — typically a caretaker's bare-bones living quarters — was rescued through community effort and converted into a small interpretive museum on the summit. Today it remains one of only a handful of Adirondack fire tower summits with a working museum at the top, staffed on summer weekends by volunteers who share the mountain's history with everyone who climbs up.
Adirondack Fire Tower Challenge
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Friends of Mt Arab
The restored fire tower, the summit cabin museum, and the ongoing care of the trail and summit all trace back to Friends of Mt Arab — a 501(c)(3) all-volunteer nonprofit dedicated to preserving the mountain and sharing it with everyone who hikes up. FOMA works in close cooperative partnership with the New York State DEC and funds its stewardship work through donations and volunteer hours. If you appreciate having this tower and cabin to climb, they're worth knowing about and supporting.
friendsofmtarab.org →Nearby: The Wild Center
Just down the road in Tupper Lake, The Wild Center is the Adirondacks' flagship natural history museum — 54,000 square feet of indoor exhibits, live river otters, a treetop walkway called the Wild Walk, and a network of wooded trails winding along the Raquette River. It's one of the few rainy-day-proof stops in the park and a natural add-on to a Mount Arab morning — especially when you're hiking with kids. We spent a day there with our toddler and wrote up how it went.
Our day at The Wild Center →Post-Hike Stop: Raquette River Brewing
Founded in 2013 by Mark Jessie and Joe Hockey, Raquette River Brewing is Tupper Lake's hometown craft brewery — small-batch, hand-crafted Adirondack ales spanning tart and tangy sours, hearty creamy stouts, crisp pale ales, and hopped-up double IPAs. Family and dog friendly, with rotating food trucks on site, it's hands-down the best place to land after a Mount Arab morning before the drive home.
raquetteriverbrewing.com →
Apparel and prints inspired by the Adirondack fire towers and the hikers who climb them. Made for the trail, designed for the park.
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A guide to all 85 unforgettable fire tower hikes across New York state. Expert insight, practical detail, and enough history to make every summit more interesting.
View on Amazon →From Tupper Lake, follow Route 3 west toward Piercefield for a little over 7 miles. Turn left onto Conifer Road and follow it for just under 2 miles to Mount Arab Road, which will be on your left. Continue about a mile along Mount Arab Road — the trailhead will be on your left, with parking across the road on the right.