How often and how much chlorine are you adding?
I saw in a previous post that you said you are using liquid chlorine right now which is exactly what you want to be using. I'm going to try and summarize what has happened so far, so please correct me if i get something wrong:
- You had white water mold (or something similar)
- You have drained and replaced a decent amount of water
- Your CYA is still off the charts high but you want to try and avoid replacing more water right now so it doesn't hit all on the same water bill.
- You currently don't see the mold, but you still have a very high chlorine demand indicating it is probably still in your water
- The consensus from TFP is that you need to SLAM, but you can't really do that until you bring your CYA down.
Honestly, if you are going to stick with your current CYA for now, your progress will definitely be slower and you will need a LOT more chlorine, but you might be able to at least get to the point where you can hold some chlorine in the water. I believe you said your CYA is well over 100, but since that is the highest level on the chart, just use that for your FC target (SLAM level for 100CYA is 39FC). Anything over min FC for your CYA will be working towards killing organics in the water.
Your signature says your pool is 27,000 gallons, so that would be about 11 gallons of 10% liquid chlorine (or 17 gallons of 6%) to reach 39FC. You would then need to test every couple hours if you can, or at least 2-3 times a day and return your FC to 39. You will go through quite a bit of testing reagents and chlorine doing it this way, which is why TFP recommends reducing your CYA before trying to SLAM. Once you are able to hold chlorine in the water, this level would be safe to swim in (rule of thumb is FC has to be above minimum and below SLAM for your CYA plus you need to be able to see the bottom of the deep end for it to be safe to swim).
Also, once you get to the next water billing cycle and are ready to replace more water, someone on here has a technique for water exchange where you use a sump pump to drain water from the deep end and simultaneously add water the shallow end with a hose (or vice versa depending on water density and temperatures). You would then calculate based on flow rate and what % of your pool you are targeting to exchange how many hours to let that setup run to replace the desired amount of water. This would use less water overall than several of partial drain/refill cycles. I can find the full instructions for you if you are interested.