Good morning! For the past few weeks I have been reading, researching, and testing our pool chemistry diligently. Today's test results attached.

Water temps are still COLD here in NH (we had snow this weekend!), so I am waiting a bit before turning on our salt cell. For now I plan to manage the pool by manually adding chlorine based on pool math calculations. After adding CYA earlier in the week, our level went up to 90, so I set our FC goal to 11 yesterday (when my test read 5) and added the amount of liquid chlorine based on pool math (84 oz). That should have brought our FC level up to 11, but today when I just tested our FC is 16 -- a bit of an overshoot, but I followed what the calculator said, so not sure what happened there?!?! Not a big deal because our pool is in bright sun all day long, so I know this will come down in time.
My questions right now are:
• How does our overall chemistry look as I anticipate turning on the SWG soon?
• Anything I should be addressing here before I decide to turn on the salt cell?
• What level do I let our FC fall to before turning on cell? -OR- Do I turn it on while levels are still higher than our FC goal?
(I don't want to risk algae growth as water looks FANTASTIC right now.
• What goal should I set for our FC level once we turn on the salt cell -- I know this number is based on CYA levels, but compared to most pool people, will likely have more "organics" in the pool as we have 5 dogs that enjoy swimming, so I am thinking our FC goal should be/will be higher than most? How high do I go?
• My understanding is that as long as we keep the FC level in our pool less than SLAM FC it should be safe to swim?
• Should I expect our SWG to be able to keep up with our FC demands? Or do most people with SWG still add chlorine manually?
I love running pool chemistry tests, so will continue to do so as we learn about pool care. My ultimate goal is to be swim ready by Memorial Day -- so hoping NH temps improve a bit to make this enjoyable!
Thank you to anyone taking the time to read this post and answer my questions!

Water temps are still COLD here in NH (we had snow this weekend!), so I am waiting a bit before turning on our salt cell. For now I plan to manage the pool by manually adding chlorine based on pool math calculations. After adding CYA earlier in the week, our level went up to 90, so I set our FC goal to 11 yesterday (when my test read 5) and added the amount of liquid chlorine based on pool math (84 oz). That should have brought our FC level up to 11, but today when I just tested our FC is 16 -- a bit of an overshoot, but I followed what the calculator said, so not sure what happened there?!?! Not a big deal because our pool is in bright sun all day long, so I know this will come down in time.
My questions right now are:
• How does our overall chemistry look as I anticipate turning on the SWG soon?
• Anything I should be addressing here before I decide to turn on the salt cell?
• What level do I let our FC fall to before turning on cell? -OR- Do I turn it on while levels are still higher than our FC goal?
(I don't want to risk algae growth as water looks FANTASTIC right now.
• What goal should I set for our FC level once we turn on the salt cell -- I know this number is based on CYA levels, but compared to most pool people, will likely have more "organics" in the pool as we have 5 dogs that enjoy swimming, so I am thinking our FC goal should be/will be higher than most? How high do I go?
• My understanding is that as long as we keep the FC level in our pool less than SLAM FC it should be safe to swim?
• Should I expect our SWG to be able to keep up with our FC demands? Or do most people with SWG still add chlorine manually?
I love running pool chemistry tests, so will continue to do so as we learn about pool care. My ultimate goal is to be swim ready by Memorial Day -- so hoping NH temps improve a bit to make this enjoyable!
Thank you to anyone taking the time to read this post and answer my questions!