staying on top of the leafe problem at closing/ winterizing heater

HeidiP

Well-known member
Jun 10, 2017
127
Ottawa/ON, Canada
My online pool supplier is out of leaf nets so I cant use that during closing - but I'm going INSANE with the # of leaves making their way into the pool. ERGH!
scheduled to close this weekend, but tons of leaves in the pool and the water is down in the 50's.
So do i crank it to 70 and get in to scoop or am i asking for algae problems at that point? and if i crank it up, should i wait till the water drops back to 60 and below? my heater raises the temp pretty quickly. shortly after that i will need to winterize my gas heater. Looking into hiring someone to just winterize the equipment so I can do the rest of the close myself. I don't want to have a swamp in the spring, and i don't want to blow up my gas heater. :p

Any input so much appreciated. My winter cover should be here before the week is out - if not, closing will have to happen during the week next week.
 
I can sympathize. I have an inground pool and I've been using a leaf skimmer like this one to get them off the bottom. Very time consuming and annoying but at least it's been effective getting the bigger leaves out so I can just vacuum the remaining small debris at closing (which I plan for tomorrow). I've pulled the equivalent of a yard bag out already this past week.

Leaf nets don't seem practical to me but admittedly I don't know how to solve this going forward if it's recommended to hold off closing until water drops below 60oF. The pool is full of leaves well before then.
 
If you have a major leaf problem I would close the pool mid September and either get a safety cover or winter cover/after bags. I close my oool every Labor Day weekend, regardless of water temp and it's crystal clear by the time the ice melts.
 
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