Maybe water is being forced out of the line due to a problem with the jets?Looks like a spa jet air intake pipe to me. The air intake is turned down.
Maybe water is being forced out of the line due to a problem with the jets?
The bucket is hiding the auto-fill valve. I had to replace it twice in the last few years. Once from something hitting it during a windstorm, so I keep it protected under there. I don't know what that line with the red dot is, I've wondered that myself.
Can you show the valve?The bucket is hiding the auto-fill valve.
Water meter is not moving at night or when everyone else is not home. I watch it for 2-3 minutes at a time and that triangle stays in place.Can you show the valve?
Maybe the line going to the valve is leaking?
Check your house meter to see if it is running with all water usage in the house turned off.
So I started digging about a foot down in different areas and the soil was not getting any damper or wetter as I dug deeper (no mud or evident water either).I agree, you have leak.
You can't always trust the household water meters to show a leak. I had an improperly repaired main line leak (meter to house) in a 1-1/2" PVC line. Sometimes the blue triangle low flow indicator would spin and other times it would show no movement. Even when I would throw the 1/4 turn main shutoff to the house and isolate the line, the indicator would not always show a leak. But, the area the the line ran through was just an open patch of dirt and rocks. The soil there was always a little more moist looking than the surrounding area especially if you dug down just an inch or two. Basically then entire area was saturated clay soil and so the leak depended a bit on how much water would evaporate. My water bills were sporadic as well ... sometimes they looked normal and other times there would be an anomalous few extra CCF's of use.
Point is, you can't "think" your way to a solution on this ... grab shovel and dig. Sometimes medical imaging tells a doctor nothing but, when they open up the patient and explore, they find all kinds of problems ... You have the warning sign, aka, a wet patch of dirt, now it's time to go exploring. If you're landscaper/pool guys won't do it for you, then do it yourself. There's no harm in digging around.
There's no harm in digging around.
If they are drainage pipes, that’s the most evil thing you can do to a homeowner. Drainage should never be buried into soil. But check your heater like James mentioned above. Sounds like it’s water coming from up above if it’s not getting wetter as you dig.So I started digging about a foot down in different areas and the soil was not getting any damper or wetter as I dug deeper (no mud or evident water either).
However, right near the heater I discovered these two pipes and there is some muddier soil in that area.
My landscaper believes those might be drainage pipes, but he has no idea to what. If they are drainage to the heater, would it be draining even when the heater is not running?
Maybe you could put a hose on the pipe and carefully push some water into the pipes?