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2018.09.22UPDATE: Rain, Rain, GO AWAY

For the third time this week, I'm actually pumping water out of my pool — somewhat unconventionally — because the rain has filled it to its maximum height.

The National Weather Service keeps extending their river flood warnings because the rain won't move out of the area.

We totally need the water, but this is too much, I'm afraid. We're having to add water to our pool weekly — sometimes more than that — during the hot summer weather. But really. Having to dump water OUT of it three times in a week??

 

UPDATE:
It's happening again. We pumped water out of the pool for over a half hour late last night — I should have done more, but Laurel was ready for bed — and am doing it for another 45 minutes now. We placed a flip-flop in the pool as a convenient water level marker, and it's floating at the top of the basin, barely under the coping. (It might actually be stuck there, meaning the gap between the water and the coping is less than the height of the footbed — maybe ¼".)

The "somewhat unconventional" means of dispatching the water involves use of our "robot": an automated pool cleaner. The pump pushes water through the vaccuum port down a line attached to the cleaner. Normally, the pressure pushes the cleaner along the bottom of the pool and sucks debris up from the bottom and out into a bag at the top. To use the cleaner to get water out of the pool, lift the cleaner out of the pool and disconnect the bag. This will do two things: first, it'll give you about a 2" aperature through which pool water can escape; depending on how much crap has already been caught in the filter, I can drop the water about 1" over roughly 20 minutes. The second thing it will do is get you drenched. Try to lay the cleaner on it's side or prop it up to shoot the water further from the pool. Sure, it's not nice to the area that receives the water, but I'd rather soak an area of my lawn than have water coming out of the pool and approaching the house.

Both times we've had rains like these, they started on the day our pool guy complained the water level was too low. When he does this, he usually turns on our hose to bring the water up to an acceptable level. I think I'm going to start paying particular attention to the weather forecast on the days of his visits, and let that guide my decision to let him fill or not... but with most of the heat for the year now behind us, maybe it won't be an issue again until next summer.




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