sooo...
I bought a home in vegas 3 years ago with a pool and zero pool experience. Thanks to you in a couple of months I fired the pool guy (that was using the pucks) and managed the pool myself initially with liquid chlorine and MA and then adding a SWG. Never had major problems and everything was running very smoothly a part for calcium that I knew was accumulating over time, last time I checked it (over a year ago) it was around 450 so I knew eventually I was going to change the water or part of it.
Then I left town for a few weeks with the neighbor was stopping by about once a week to clean pump and skimmer.
Well, I came back yesterday to a green pool, somehow the pump was turned off... so no filter and no chlorine... my guess is that it happened about a week ago, the water is not too bad I think although I have no experience with algae.
Now, the reason I am writing is this: I read the articles here about SLAM and how to clear the water with no need to changed it,.
My CYA is at 20 right now BUT the calcium is so high that I thought the test was broken... it took 36 drops with a 10ml samples so we are talking about 25*36=900....
So, I am draining the pool as much as I can, I don't want to add chemicals to a water that needs to be changed anyway and I have a few questions:
- am I correct in thinking that I might as well change the water now to bring the hardness to acceptable levels before slamming? My understanding is that vegas water by itself is at 280 hardness, so basically I need to change the entire pool if I want to bring it down and be ok for a while (or at least change 75% of the water)
- when I refill the water, is there a way to do it to clear the algae at the same time?
PS: funny enough I am not upset about what happened, instead I am looking forward to the learning. When I got here 3 years ago I thought running a pool was extremely hard and time consuming but thanks to you I got it down to checking chlorine levels once a week and ph once every 2-3 weeks making small adjustments to the swg or the ph with MA. And I very well know that's a result of the way of doing things that is explained here, so thanks a lot because it has been amazing.
Here is a picture from a few minutes ago, I have already started to drain it and I cleaned the surface as much as I could.

I bought a home in vegas 3 years ago with a pool and zero pool experience. Thanks to you in a couple of months I fired the pool guy (that was using the pucks) and managed the pool myself initially with liquid chlorine and MA and then adding a SWG. Never had major problems and everything was running very smoothly a part for calcium that I knew was accumulating over time, last time I checked it (over a year ago) it was around 450 so I knew eventually I was going to change the water or part of it.
Then I left town for a few weeks with the neighbor was stopping by about once a week to clean pump and skimmer.
Well, I came back yesterday to a green pool, somehow the pump was turned off... so no filter and no chlorine... my guess is that it happened about a week ago, the water is not too bad I think although I have no experience with algae.
Now, the reason I am writing is this: I read the articles here about SLAM and how to clear the water with no need to changed it,.
My CYA is at 20 right now BUT the calcium is so high that I thought the test was broken... it took 36 drops with a 10ml samples so we are talking about 25*36=900....
So, I am draining the pool as much as I can, I don't want to add chemicals to a water that needs to be changed anyway and I have a few questions:
- am I correct in thinking that I might as well change the water now to bring the hardness to acceptable levels before slamming? My understanding is that vegas water by itself is at 280 hardness, so basically I need to change the entire pool if I want to bring it down and be ok for a while (or at least change 75% of the water)
- when I refill the water, is there a way to do it to clear the algae at the same time?
PS: funny enough I am not upset about what happened, instead I am looking forward to the learning. When I got here 3 years ago I thought running a pool was extremely hard and time consuming but thanks to you I got it down to checking chlorine levels once a week and ph once every 2-3 weeks making small adjustments to the swg or the ph with MA. And I very well know that's a result of the way of doing things that is explained here, so thanks a lot because it has been amazing.
Here is a picture from a few minutes ago, I have already started to drain it and I cleaned the surface as much as I could.
