Rain, Rain, Where are you?
  
   
 
    
                          
  By Clell Ford
  The level of
  Lake Istokpoga, at the time this was written, was at least 8 inches below
  where it should be at this time of year. Why, you ask. Well, the answer is
  simply too little rain and too much evaporation.  According to Clell
  Ford, we lose between 1/4" to 1/5" per day. Read on for the rest of
  the story.
    
  To determine the lake level You essentially need to plug evaporation and
  rainfall values into a hydrologic model for Istokpoga that accounts for all
  losses of water from the lake and all gains of water to the lake. Sounds
  simple. Right?
    
  In the case of Istokpoga, evaporation is likely the main loss of water from
  the lake (except for the insignificant amounts lost around the edges of the
  structures, especially given that SFWMD "is not releasing water from
  Istokpoga").  Evaporation in Highlands County is estimated to
  average 50 inches per year, or ~6 inches per month or more this time of year-
  perhaps a more conservative (on the high side) estimate would put it between
  1/4 and 1/5 inch per day. For Istokpoga, that represents ~500 acre-feet of
  water per day, 2,178,000 cubic feet per day or 252 cubic feet per second (cfs).
  Just to evaporation. There is also a small flow into the lake: USGS reported
  23 cfs down Josephine Creek today, and there may be 5 to  10 times more
  than that flowing down Arbuckle creek today. Make it 10X and the flow into
  Istokpoga (Josephine + Arbuckle Creeks ~253 cfs) might be keeping up with the
  evaporative losses. This time of year the shallow groundwater seepage into the
  lake is somewhat small; since I do not have a good number to estimate it, I
  will ignore it for this back of the envelope
  calculation.
  Thus ends the easy part.
     
  The hard part is how much rainfall it will take to raise the level of the
  lake. That
  depends far less on how much water actually falls on the lake,
  than how much
  water falls in the 603 square mile (385,952 acre) watershed that drains to the
  lake. Soil moisture conditions, lake levels on the Ridge,
  the
  potentiometric surface (fancy name for elevation - compare it with the land
  surface elevation to predict springs) of the shallow and intermediate aquifer
  and the actual location of the rainfall in the watershed all factor into the
  rate of runoff to Istokpoga. There is probably a whole host of other
  incredibly important factors that I have completely ignored in
  developing
  this "model".
    Unlike
  the evaporation loss and stream flow balance, I do not have good estimates for
  the rainfall input function is (for obvious reasons).
  One thing is
  certain, simply
  receiving
  1/5" to 1/4" of rain every day on Lake Istokpoga will be hard
  pressed to bring the lake up to its dry season level. It will depend on
  consistent  rainfall and creek flows throughout the watershed..
  
  
  Note: Thanks
  to Clell Ford for this simplified explanation of the evaporation problem we
  are experiencing on our lake.