Stonelick Creek, Ohio, US |
|
| Usual Difficulty | III-IV (for normal flows) |
|---|---|
| Length | 4.5 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient | 31 fpm |
| Max Gradient | 64 fpm |
| Name | Range | Difficulty | Updated | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| East Fork Little Miami River at Perintown OH | ||||
| usgs-03247500 | 1000 - 8000 cfs | III-IV | 01h06m | 314 cfs (rc= -0.1 ) |
Quite easy. From put in on St. Rt. 131 travel west one mile to St. Rt. 132. Turn left (South). Drive about 2.5 miles to bridge over creek.
From the South: Take I275 East to the Rt 50 exit. Turn left(North-west) on 50. Rt. 131 enters
from the right. Turn right onto Rt. 131 and continue several miles to the bridge over the
river.
From the North: Take I275 East to the Rt. 28 exit. Turn left(North-East) onto Rt 28. Continue on
Rt. 28 to Buckwheat road. Turn right onto Buckwheat and take it to Rt. 131. Turn left and
continue several miles to the bridge over the river.
The first known run of this small but very fun stream was back in 1967. However it wasn't
until the mid 80's that the general whitewater population of the Cincinnati area became aware
of it.
The usual put in is under the bridge where State route 131 crosses the river. Please note that
this is private land. While there have never been any problems in the past, please be aware that
inconsiderate behavior by boaters could result in the loss of this access.
I have also put in right below the dam on Stonelick lake, however access to the river there is
poor. This adds about 4 miles of swiftly flowing water to the trip, but not much else.
The first mile or so of the trip is mostly swift current through a winding riverbed with a few
nice play waves or gravel bars, depending on levels. Strainers and water flowing through trees
and willows are likely, so keep an eye out.
As one approaches the Belfast-Owensville Road bridge, which is at about the 2 mile mark, things
begin to pick up. The road can be seen on the steep banks river right, winding down to the river.
There are some nearly river wide ledges in this section that can be quite playful at most levels,
but can be terminal at very high water. Usually though, some places are quite fun and others
quite sticky, so check them out before jumping in.
Below the Belfast-Owensville Road is the best action on this run.
(NOTE: There is good access at this bridge, but it is on private land. When we approached the
landowner in the early 80's for permission to use it, he became quite agitated that we even
asked. And this is when the creek wasn't running, we were dressed in regular clothes and
approached him as friendly neighbors. I don't know if the situation has changed since then,
but suggest avoiding using that area as an access)
In this section there are a series of ledges and chutes. The action is non stop except at minimum
flows, and can be quite dangerous at high flows. There are at least two 3-4 ft ledges in this
section that have a low-head dam quality about them. They should be approached with caution at
all water levels. Sneak on extreme river right at most levels.
Strainers can also cause the most problems in this section as, even at low flows, eddies are
small and few in number.
After the action starts to ease a little, a little less than a mile after the bridge, be on the
lookout Johnson Falls. This 5+ ft drop is named after Mike Johnson, who ran this creek as an
adventurous teenager back in 1967 and who showed it to me in 1980. Mike moved away shortly
afterwards, never to be heard from again, so I named this drop in his honor. (Mike if you read
this, drop me a line!). I strongly suggest first-timers follow an experienced guide or get out
and scout it river left. It's a rough scout through poison ivy gardens, but the hole can be
quite grabby. Most folks run far right or left.
Johnson Falls @ 1.5 feet. From 1984 "Rediscovery" trip

After a small pool right below the falls, the current splits around a small island and both
branches shoot down narrow chutes to the right. This is the beginning of what we call the Gun
Club run, as there is a gun club on river right. At times, the sound of gunfire will be constant,
but don't worry, they probably aren't shooting at you. This section is constantly
changing, so a specific description will not be helpful, but in general there is a small pool or
eddy after the chute, then the creek narrows considerably and drops abruptly over a series of
ledges. On the first trips we worried about the "hole nobody played", which disappeared
and was replaced by the "hole nobody remembered", which has long ago morphed into
something unrecognizable now. Just remember there are holes, but they are usually not dangerous
like some of the ledge holes above are. However, due to the rapidly changing stream bed, the
rocks here are likely to be quite sharp. Flipping is not recommended.
After the gun club run the creek settles down and flows swiftly to the takeout at the State Route
132 bridge. I believe this access is state owned (Land directly under a bridge). People also take
out on river right a little upstream of the bridge, but that access is on private property.
The run can be continued for quite some distance downstream, if wished, but the rapids never
again come close to matching those upstream and the creek becomes unattractive due to trash and
development as one approaches populated areas.
Added by Scott Puthoff, 01/29/12:
Here is some video from a trip down Stonelick Creek
| Name | Range | Difficulty | Updated | Level | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| East Fork Little Miami River at Perintown OH | ||||||||||||
| usgs-03247500 | 1000 - 8000 cfs | III-IV | 01h06m | 314 cfs (rc= -0.1 ) | ||||||||
|
Actual flow in this reach may be on the order of 1/4 the listed gauge. |
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
| When | River/Gauge | Subject | Level | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stonelick Creek [OH] |
The Belfast Run |
1.5 ft | Bud Chavez | |
| Stonelick [OH] |
Johnson Falls Escape |
3 ft | Bud Chavez | |
| 7y348d16h05m | Stonelick Creek [OH] |
Mark B on Stonelick |
3 ft | Mark Branch |
User Comments
trail/road that takes you down to the putin. At this level you peel out from the putin eddy.
Multiple strainers on the run today. The worst by far is the one stuck at the top right at
Johnson's falls. Large tree that blocks the best line thru. Sneek extreme left until it washes thru
or portage at this point.
terrible riverwide strainer/deathtrap. This can be hard to see from very far upstream because it is
just around a bend. Look for a landslide of a cliff on river right. Portage on river left. There
has been a strainer there for over a year from a previous smaller landslide, but it had remained
passable. The hillslide slid again, and another tree or two came down all the way across the creek.
Sunday it was very sketchy. Monday, several more big trees had slid down the hillside. It is very
bad. This will require a cleanup crew in July or August.
and boaters for extended periods of time, even at medium-low flows. Get RIGHT!
moderate level. The gauge said 4.5 feet at the bridge. Once we started it felt like 7.5 to 8.5 with
river wide (HUGE) holes and screaming speed! Just a warning to anyone who wants a less exciting
run! Wood free at the moment.
a minor breaking wave/hole midway down,BIG FUN. Ran again following day at around 1.7 or so and the
last rapid was a much more technical series of continuis ledges and holes. A buddy of mine new to
the sport flipped in this rapid(was in a recreational old town rush!!!) he swam a good deal of it
and flushed through all the holes. Edit
<br>
We paddled Stonelick on Sunday 3/12 and there were two trees down all the way across the creek,
approximately 1.5 miles downstream of the put-in. This is where the creek narrows at a bend in the
river.<br>
<br>
This can be a very dangerous situation for a group of four or more due to the lack of eddies. We
had to portage 100 yards to re-enter the creek due to a cattle fence
<br>
Three of us ran Stonelick at 9.5' and still rising about 2 years ago. All I can say is the
following:<br>
1. Be prepared for Mach 3 speeds as soon as you peel out of the put-in eddy and it remains that way
to the take-out.<br>
2. Good luck finding any eddys along the way. Most all eddys are moving and the vast majority of
those are found behind standing trees that would normally be up on the banks.<br>
3. Whenever you see a horizon line, HAUL ASS FOR THE EDGE OF THE RIVER. These horizon lines are
uniform broken limestone ledges that form MONSTEROUS holes...comparable to Greyhound on the New at
4'+...no kidding... but they extend bank to bank. You will have about 3-4' on each side of the
ledges to sneak your way past, but you will deal with another hazard within the sneaks...standing
trees. We were using our hands on trees to weave our way through the forest at a couple of the
ledges and at one of them, we were in such "scramble mode" that we were grabbing at roots
hanging off a high water bank to stop ourselves so we could get out with ropes for the rescue
mentioned below.<br>
<br>
After watching two guys lose their paddles and boats and after rope rescuing both of them from
multiple recirculations in firgid water, we decided to walk off. This creek has SERIOUS flush
drowing, strainer drowning possibilities at very high levels. It should only be run by parties of
very strong boaters at these high levels.<br>
the first 3 miles gradient is 30 fpm, and the second 3 miles, Stonelick Gorge, is 55 fpm. There is
a description in Canoeing and Kayaking Ohio's Streams / Combs & Gillen