It takes exceedingly little amounts of tannins to make water have a yellow tint. When you add that yellow/brown color to the natural blue color of water and your plaster, you get green. Once chlorine starts to go to work on it, the tannins will oxidize and breakdown. You will eventually get your sparkly pool water. As
@ajw22 stated just hang in there, you’re doing fine. Focus on getting the pumps and filter ready to go. Be prepared for plaster chunks and garbage to get into the strainer basket … it’s amazing what crud can build up in the plumbing. If you have your winterizing tube in place of the SWG I would leave the system that way. Better not to expose the SWG to all the nasty pool water until you’ve gotten it filtered and balanced. Be prepared for lots of filter cleanings as the plaster dust will keep your filter working hard until it subsides.
Also, don’t go to crazy on the sequestering agent. You just need to startup dose and then a few maintenance doses. At very high levels, the sequestering agent can interfere with calcium carbonate formation which you don’t want. The right dose will hold any metals in solution, overdosing will cause other problems.