PondKeeper,
Yes I have a few photos. In fact the attached is one I took today. Although we have had 80 degree weather earlier this month, today it is 30 and we have snow. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif I like snow.
My pond is 11 feet deep at the center and yes the drought has caused some problems. I solved them by two relatively large expenditures. During the drought of 1999 my springs dried up, my solution was to dig an auxilliary well, at least that is what I told the wife. She might have rebelled at $8000 for the trout. With the well, I put 55 degree water into the pond in the summer for about 8 hours a day. You can see the well's hydrant at the left in the foreground of the photo. Other than the hottest part of the summer it stays below 65 and the Brook Trout and Rainbows are fine. The other expenditure that aided circulation was a thermostatically controlled dedicated high volume, low pressure air compressor that feeds a 2 foot by 2 foot air stone in the deepest part of the pond. The air circulates 120,000 gallons of water per hour and keeps the oxygen content at 10 ppm. I circulate the water whenever the air temperature is below my desired maximum temperature of 65 degrees. It also serves to keep the center of the pond ice free during the winter. This has two advantages: 1) it allows me to keep water fowl all year long, and 2) it avoids the common winter fish kill that so often occurs in small ponds. The air from the airstone is the boil that you see in the center of the pond. The airstone compressor system cost about $2200. in 1998.
Bill