Since you love concrete, why not fill the pole with concrete and cap it with roof tar?
Hey, I didn't see your 10' ground rod anywhere. Better check your local codes on grounding. If you don't have a local code, follow the NEC. You should have a 10 ft ground rod at that nice box where the coax enters the house. Bond the green wire there. Then at the pole with the concrete base, a second ground rod with the base of the pole bonded to that rod. Considering the trees and flat terrain I saw in the pictures, the pole ground rod is critical. The rod at the point of house entry is also required as code but in my opinion, secondary to the one at the pole. What I would do if I had your setup is to drill a 5/8" hole through the concrete base with an extension masonry bit and drive the ground rod inside the base. Then attach a solid aluminum wire from the base of the pole with a clamp to that rod. With a good ground at that pole, you may never see a silent hit to your electronics inside the house even if the trees next to the pole take a direct hit which is likely. The second rod at the house point of entry is a secondary drain point. The wire bonding the box at the house to the pole through the conduit is essentially useless from a static discharge point of view. I don't think it serves any other purpose either from an RF standpoint.
Also, I see you used stranded copper for the ground. This will work fine when new but not as good as a solid copper or solid aluminum wire for static electricity ground. The wire you used is meant for electrical house wiring grounding, not static ground.
In a priority of efficacy the two rods are most important to prevent silent static lightning damage to your electronics in the house. The wire design has more to do with reduction of corona point static buildup over time but considering it's proximity to ground level and inside a box the odds of trouble are very much reduced. I have used krylon clear spray over the grounding blocks to keep the wire and block nice and shiny clean over years. Do that after you determine everything is done and not to be touched for a long time.