Use a net to remove those that you can. As tadpoles cannot be living to deep in the pool, you will likely not need to go very far down. Drain the pool. Those tadpoles that are left will likely die, or be easier to remove with the net. Depending on where you live, frogs will probably not stay around a dry hole for very long and will move on. From there, you need to only clean the pool and refill it using chlorine to keep out such creatures in the future. Use a cover to keep them from coming back in the colder months, or drain the pool again.
I have them too! I suppose you have to get the water out of the cover as soon as the snow thaws and keep it dry until you open it. Easier said than done.
fishing net and with your hands
get a net take them out
If tadpoles are resistant to pool chemicals, check your local hardware store for a chemical shock treatment. These are generally formulated to be gentle on pool equipment. It will mean staying out of your pool for a week or more, but the tadpoles will eventually die.
probably tadpoles.
You will see what look like very small fish with tails (or possibly legs if they are becoming frogs soon) and frogs around your pool. If there are tadpoles in your pool you should be able to see them.
chorline will kill them in the liquid form of high doses
I have a swimming pool that was going a little green and a frog laid 1,000,000,000 eggs in it. I started netting tadpoles to put in the talapia tank to see if they ate them and they eat the heck out of tadpoles.
Most tadpoles develop first in eggs, and then in a body of freshwater, such as a pond, stream, or other small pool. There are a few species that develop in special pouches on the parents body.
They look like baby tadpoles, they are small black and have a tail. They wriggle around like small worms in the pool water.
It is a cloud of tadpoles.
No they will nibble your toes it will tickle and you will drown from laughing underwater.
They are backswimmers or Water Boatman bugs. Jenny in North Dakota
No. Tadpoles do not play dead.
Tadpoles start of with gills.