Even after all the rain we've had this year, especially in July, I keep reading about ramps on usable on the lakes around Tallahassee. I'm the 6th generation owner of some property in Baker County, GA, which is SW of Albany and just west of Newton. That area has the Flint to the east and the Chickasawhatchee Creek to the west. There are numerous natural dish pan ponds in the area. They look more like something you'd see in FL than in GA. These are all spring fed with no creek inflows. In the early 80's they got low but didn't dry up. My great grandfather said at the time he had never seen them get nearly that low and he was almost 90 at the time and had lived on the property his whole life. When I moved back home from Texas in 2000 the area ponds had almost dried up and by 2001 they were nothing but grass fields. Even the areas where the springs upwelled were just dry dirt. They got about 3/4 of the water back around 2003 and bass got in and got up to about 4 pounds before the ponds all dried up again. Twice since then they have had a little water on the bottom but it has dried up quickly like it is actually going back into the springs.
I was there in June and about 1/3 of the pond bottom had water on it but the pond grass was taller than the water. I was there yesterday and was hopeful the water level would be up. I figured with 13 inches showing on the Flint River rain gauge for the month of July hopefully the aquifer had come up enough to open the springs again. I think there was actually LESS water in there than what I saw in June...

I rode and looked at two other ponds and they were the same way. I call these ponds but they are probably 80 to 300 acres each. They are usually 6' to 9' in the deepest holes but average 4' to 5'. I've heard rumors Miller Brewing in Albany is causing some of our aquifer problems and that might be true. I think the main culprit is all the pivot irrigation systems that have been put in over the last 20 years. You can look at the satellite photo and the whole area is covered with circular fields. Those big pipes pump a huge amount of water out of the ground to keep the fields green. When I was a kid they irrigated out of the pond and it never seemed to affect it. Now there are two pivots within a 1/4 mile of the pond. I'm beginning to think my pond is gone and I now have a big open grass field.
I took some pictures yesterday and even found a skeleton of what was probably an 8 foot alligator in the edge of the woods by the pond.
This is what I used to have... It was actually low at this point. The water should have been up almost to the oak limb. You can see a green grass line and sand line where the pond edge should be.
These are all the circular fields with pivot systems. My pond is circled in red at about 12 o'clock in this photo.
These were taken Friday July 26, 2013 They start in the SW corner and progress clockwise around most of what should be the pond. I'd be standing in thigh deep water from where I took these if the pond was full. There is water out there in the middle but the pond grass is tall enough that you can't see any of the water.
The gators that couldn't make it to the river haven't got anywhere to go. I'm sure the woods are full of skeletons of gators that couldn't get to the river because of fences or got to worn down in drying up ponds.
