As I make part of my living sculpting endangered species, including frogs, I decided to do a quick check on why this pond is titled "Frog Pond". Looks like there used to be a species of frog, the Yellow Legged Frog", that has been nearly wiped out in the last hundred years. In case anyone is interested, here's part of an article on a frog that was found near Mt Whitney a few years back.
Sierra Nature Notes, Volume 6, January 2006
With Recovery Efforts Underway, Danger still exists for the frogs
by Peter Stekel
Yellow-legged frog dead of Chytrid fungus near Mt. Whitney, Sequoia National Park.
At one time, the mountain yellow-legged frog (Rana muscosa) was one of the most common vertebrates in the high elevation aquatic ecosystems of the Sierra Nevada and Transverse Ranges of southern California. Then came the well-documented decline in the species that occurred with the introduction of non-native fish. The fish, primarily trout, ate frog tadpoles in large numbers. And now, an emerging infectious fungal disease, chytridiomycosis, has created another threat to the frog’s survival.