I'm sure you've heard this one before. I just bought a house at the beginning of May. Mostly working on renovating the inside to make it livable by the end of June, but every time I head out the back yard, there is the swamp, calling for attention. Largish diamond shape. Vinyl liner. Can't see the bottom. There are a ton of frogs. Working (slowly) to get it to the point where I can actually work on it. There was a bunch of pipe missing (and likely pipes below ground have some issues), rough fit some into place only to find that the pressure gauge on the filter is toast. (As a side note, exploding PVC couplings make a great, if not messy, pressure limiter for filters... or so I found) So, work in progress. I plan to try and get the filter in some workable order and perhaps SLAM the thing, but right now there is so much debris in the water that I fear it would just laugh at any bleach I through in. Like everything else at the house, its a project. Very interested in getting it running, but not if it's just going to be a hole to throw cash into. Very interested in the idea of flipping it to salt seeing as I'm in the frozen north, seems like it could only help me with freezing come winter.
I have not dug, but I'm looking for any tips on bulk organics removal. I was thinking of McGyvering some kind of giant garbage can based coarse filter for leaves and all the muck on the bottom. I've spent some quality time with the whimpy little net that was here, scooping off some of the stuff, but its really a joke, I need something that can handle volume.
I have not dug, but I'm looking for any tips on bulk organics removal. I was thinking of McGyvering some kind of giant garbage can based coarse filter for leaves and all the muck on the bottom. I've spent some quality time with the whimpy little net that was here, scooping off some of the stuff, but its really a joke, I need something that can handle volume.