JasonLion said:
If all your CYA disappears over the winter and you backwash regularly and your pool season isn't too long and you are careful to never get algae you can use trichlor forever.
Ok, not to be too dense

, but I thought that the ONLY way to be rid of high CYA is to replace water. How can it "disappear" over the winter?
I had a substantial CYA at the end of last year in the 100+ppm range and I had tons of problems after doing an ascorbic acid treatment for the stains (ascorbic acids really WORKS-too bad you can't swim in THAT, but I had issues afterward which I am unsure are related). So by virtue of an unknown hole in our cover we have pumped out almost 1/2 of the water over the winter and have replaced with fresh over the last month. (I supplmented with about 6 gallons of bleach, 1 Qt Poly 60, just to be safe) I did a quick peek a couple of days ago and conservatively I had these readings:
FC 1
CYA @0 <10 (the reading looked like 0 though)
TA @100
PH@ 7.2
What do you guys suggest for gently raising the CYA (I have an inline trichlor dispenser and would like to use the rest of these pucks before a switch to a SWG next year) while supplementing with bleach. My little peek under the cover yielded a very slight milkiness to the water, although the shallow end was pretty darn clear (of course the stains are back-

). My husband found a decomposed mouse in the pool, don't know how that contributed?

I hate to say it but the pool guys seemed to do a better job than I do. Even if they got algae, the water tended to be clear (with algae), I tend to get the pool milky. What might I be doing wrong? Specs are below.