About OCBS

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Cleveland, Ohio, United States
The Ohio Central Basin Steelheaders fishing club is an association of fishermen which was formed in 1984 and is dedicated to the protection and promotion of steelhead sport fishing in Ohio and the Great Lakes region. OCBS works hard for you, the steelhead fisherman, to help insure that the steelhead programs will be here for you tomorrow and for future generations to come. The OCBS Team has many ongoing projects and tasks to achieve our goals. OCBS has a great partnership with our state's Ohio Division of Natural Resources (ODNR) and their steelhead stocking program. We are a proud member of the Great Lakes Sport Fishing Council. OCBS works closely with the Cleveland, Lorain, Ashtabula, and Lake County Metro Parks to provide fishing related programs which benefit the general public.

Monday, October 29, 2012


Record Rainbow Trout (Steelhead) Spawn
In Ohio Streams in Spring 2012
Cleveland Metroparks monitoring surveys in early-mid summer indicate that area streams experienced an unprecedented level of natural reproduction of migratory rainbow trout (steelhead) in spring 2012.

Between 19 June and 18 July, 2012, a total of 1,677 juvenile (naturally reproduced) rainbow trout were collected during routine monitoring activities in five headwater stream tributaries of the Chagrin and Cuyahoga rivers on Cleveland Metroparks land.  Given the length of the reaches sampled, this reflected an average density of 3,168 juvenile rainbow trout per stream mile!  In a few of the streams, these trout were the dominant fish species present numerically.  Although we expect to see some juvenile rainbow trout in our stream surveys from year to year (for example, in 2011 a total of 11 juvenile trout were collected in two Rocky River tributary streams), the numbers found in 2012 were unprecedented and totally unexpected.

So this begs the question of why so many little trout in 2012. 

Looking back at environmental conditions, we had the wettest year on record in 2011.  This trend continued into early spring 2012.  Lots of loose sediment was flushed from all our watersheds during this period.  I remember clearly noticing how clean the rocks were by the Rocky River marina in winter 2011-12.

Then,in April 2012 things changed drastically and we received almost no precipitation.  Most steelhead anglers were not happy about the disappointing fishing conditions in April due to very low and clear water conditions.  But this also meant that spawning steelhead would have had their eggs subjected to far less silt than usual during mid to late spring.  Trout eggs and fry are notoriously very sensitive to silt, so less silt would be a beneficial situation for their hatching and development.  I ran this hypothesis by my trout supplier, who has hatched and reared many thousands of trout over the years, and he believes this theory is right on the mark. 

Even if trout hatch and survive until early summer in our streams, though, they need to make it through the heat of late summer.  Re-surveying one of the streams sampled earlier this year in late September did reveal that a handful of the little trout made it through the summer, which I imagine was likely the case on other streams with some groundwater seepage, as well.

The end result is that in about 2-4 years the odds of catching a wild steelhead trout in an Ohio stream will be better than usual, although realistically the fish will only comprise a small fraction of returning steelhead at best.  There is no way to tell for certain visually if an adult Ohio steelhead of wild origin, but if the fins are flawless (especially the dorsal fin on top), there is certainly a possibility it could be a natural reproduced fish, which many anglers will find to be a neat prospect.
                                            Mike Durkalec M. S.
                                                Aquatic  Biologist
                                                Cleveland Metroparks

Friday, October 19, 2012


2012 April Vokey Fly Tying Experience

 
November 14, and 16th, 2012 - 6 PM- 9PM

Cost: $55 Pre-registration required.

Join April Vokey of Fly Gal Ventures for a fun-filled evening of fly-tying as she helps to demystify general questions that intrigue many beginner fly-tiers.

Students are encouraged to bring their own tools, however, materials are provided and the use of necessary tools/equipment may be arranged with advance notice to the shop.

Gather around our comfortable tying table and observe, evaluate and conquer every tying step as April walks each student through the process. We’re aware that beginners learn at different rates and patient ‘one-on-one’ time ensures that no one gets “lost” at the table.

Each step is explained slowly and thoroughly, providing additional bits of information and alternative techniques along the way.

Enjoy learning the steps of basic fly-tying on your first fly of the evening and then venture into your own creations as you proceed to complete a second. Each wrap will put you one step closer to stocking your fly box!

This course is a participation based course and there are only a few more spots available. Book now to hold your space! Email Joe Moravec at mora12429@roadrunner.com  for registration.