You must have a vac system. Use it to remove the dust. The pool equipment can not do it all you have to help keep the pool clean by vac the pool, adding chemicals, cleaning the tile line etc. A pool is a money pit and labor intensive.
You could also have a broken filter element with a D E filter. In that case get the filter repaired.
sweep it and put soap and water on a wash rag
3/4 open for skimmer, 1/2 or 1/4 open for floor. If your pool has a deep end and the deep looks murky while the shallow layer looks clear, do a few cannonballs off the springboard, else open the floor drain to full for a little while.
if you pool is under a tree, then that is the reason. Most likely, you had a high level of sanitizer (chlorine) in the pool and it corroded the minerals (perhaps copper) in the incoming water. The above answers are way off - there is no accuracy in either. Your pool may have been on the brink of turning green anyway. The fresh water only excellerated the situation. Your chemical balances were off - both the chlor and pH. Als, in the above answer 2 they refer to copper stains. And that can only come from a low pH or low Total Alkalinity or both. The stains will appear on the wall and floor surfaces not in the sus[ension in the water. The statement in 2nd answer that the minerals were corroded is false - you can't corrode minerals but you can corrode the copper inside the heater by or with a low pH. A solution would be to extend the run time on the filter/pump thru the summer until the weather starts to cool. 6 to 12 hrs is a normal run time for a small pool. So, to finish the rest of the question - extend the filter time to clear the pool, add a boost in chlor by using liquid at 12.5% strength, brush any algae that is clinging to the walls & floor.
Yes. I am not clear on why Blood On The Dance Floor's fight with Jeffree Star, But they kicked Jeffree Star off the CD's and singles for their new album.
It was named for the Colorado River. The river got its name from sediment that it scraps off the floor of Grand Canyon. In Spanish, "colorado" means "colored red".
In order to re stain a wood floor you must sand off all the existing finish. DO NOT try to apply stain over an already finished floor. It will not take. You can easily re coat your floor with clear polyurthane.
The liquid obtained from decantation is typically called the supernatant. It is the clear liquid that is poured off after the sediment has settled to the bottom of a container.
You can buy pool chlorinating chemicals that prevent the growth of algae and bacteria. You also skim floating debris off the top, and vacuum debris off the bottom. (Outdoor pools tend to get lots of debris; indoor pools get much less.)
To make muddy water from your tube well clear, you can let it settle in a container for a few hours to allow the sediment to sink to the bottom. Then carefully pour off the clearer water from the top into a separate container. You can also use a filtration system or add a flocculant to help the sediment clump together for easier removal.
To flush sediment from a hot water line, turn off the water heater, connect a garden hose to the drain valve, and run the other end of the hose to a drain. Open the drain valve and let the water flush out the sediment until it runs clear. Close the valve and turn the water heater back on.
Get out. Get your feet and body off of the floor and get out of the door.
If you use a test kit and your chlorine level is high I would say no, let the filter run and while the filter is running vacuum the bottom of the pool to remove some of the mud off the bottom of the pool floor and check the filter for high pressue, so the filter can do its job and get the pool clean. You want to keep your chlorine level above normal during the cleaning level so when the pool is clean your are ready to use it, also I do not know how brown or muddy the water is.