I tried to find an answer for this, but a response in the old thread from 2013 that I linked below is the closest I could find. I would like to follow the TFP guidelines of not fully closing my pool until the water temperature is below 60°. I’m in Oklahoma though, and our weather varies wildly during this time. It may be December before our water stays below 60°. While waiting for the water to be 60°, we are surrounded by pasture lands and the dead heads of a lot of tall grass blow into the pool like crazy, clogging the skimmer basket, starting mid-October. Last year our fiberglass pool was installed in late October and not closed until the deck was poured in December. We had to set alarms in the middle of the night to go empty the very full skimmer basket if we had to run the pump overnight due to freezing temps. Miserable!
I’d like to put on my Loop Loc cover but not close the pool. In other words, I’d still run the pump several hours a day and continue to monitor chemicals. In the convo I linked below someone mentioned a PVC pipe with a 90 degree elbow under a section of the loop loc to use to get liquid chlorine into the pool. That would be easy for use to do. We would monitor the skimmer basket by removing two of the springs on the Loop Loc and using bungee cords instead near the skimmer. (The bungees would be much easier to remove and reattach than the springs.)
When our water temps are below 60 we would formally close the pool. We have a fiberglass pool so we don’t lower water levels or blow out water, so the cover wouldn’t be in our way for those tasks.
Is my plan feasible? What problems do you guys with more experience foresee. This is our first season with the pool, and the advice here has been the best thing for us. We are devoted to the TFP method.
www.troublefreepool.com
I’d like to put on my Loop Loc cover but not close the pool. In other words, I’d still run the pump several hours a day and continue to monitor chemicals. In the convo I linked below someone mentioned a PVC pipe with a 90 degree elbow under a section of the loop loc to use to get liquid chlorine into the pool. That would be easy for use to do. We would monitor the skimmer basket by removing two of the springs on the Loop Loc and using bungee cords instead near the skimmer. (The bungees would be much easier to remove and reattach than the springs.)
When our water temps are below 60 we would formally close the pool. We have a fiberglass pool so we don’t lower water levels or blow out water, so the cover wouldn’t be in our way for those tasks.
Is my plan feasible? What problems do you guys with more experience foresee. This is our first season with the pool, and the advice here has been the best thing for us. We are devoted to the TFP method.
Adding Chemicals Over the Winter Months
Folks- Wanted to break this out as it's own topic as I gotta figure others will want to know more about how/whether/ when to address treating the pool over the winter. My contact from Aqivations, the plaster manufacturer for Hydrazzo, stated that; "It is imperative to check and adjust...

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