Just trying to look on the bright side. The rains will come and the lakes will fill up again.
Yep, you are right, the rains will eventually come, but before everything 'heals' with the moisture, the lack of good vegetation will mean increased erosion and silting of ponds, streams, and lakes.
Here are some pictures I took this afternoon while mining sand on our lake's sandbars. There is a small creek (really a ditch) that drains into the lake after travelling 1-1/2 miles from Hwy 287. It collects sand and silt and deposits all that at the mouth as it empties into our lake. I just happen to own the land where it makes the deposit, so I guess I'll eventually own everyone else's property around me when it arrives via the creek.

:laughing:
The first two pictures below show the lake at about 4-1/2' down from overflow. The sandbars are clearly visible. I can't get to the ones near the water because they wont support my TLB. When I put down the outriggers, water seeps up and they just wallow down in the mud. I haven't been stuck, but only because I'm savvy to what is happening and move the tractor before it sinks in the sand. I tried to move with a full bucket of sand and the front tires just sunk almost to the axle down into dry sand. The mud below the sand is no support and the loose sand provides almost zero traction.
The third picture is of my slough. It's normall 3' to 4' deep and just to the left in this picture is an island that is home to a beaver colony.
The 4th picture is the pile of dirt from today's digging.
The 5th picture is my pond. Thank goodness it is 12 feet deep or it would be drying up. I'm guessing half the water is gone. The small surface area compared to the depth is the only reason I can figure it isn't dryer. It's also protected from a lot of wind since it sits down in a bowl with a nice growth of trees on the 50% of the shoreline.
Ron (pacerron): I noticed two young bucks a couple of nights ago that had almost black, faces, manes and tails. I commented to my wife that their color is getting very dark. Not all deer seem to be that way, but some of them have made dramatic color changes in the last month.