July 28, 2006
COMMENTARY: Backyard-Pool Owner Gets That Sinking Feeling
By Steve Brewer
Scripps Howard News Service
Nothing says summer like the sting of chlorinated water in your eyes.
Swimming seems a great way to beat the heat, which is why so many people
make the mistake of putting swimming pools right in their own yards.
Pools have become commonplace in warmer climes. Fly over any Sun Belt city
and you'll be astounded by the number of pools you see in the yards below.
It's as if our cities have broken out in bright blue freckles.
But those freckles are not the pristine bodies of water they seem. Instead
they're vats of chemical soup, a mix of chlorine and pH balancer and
algacide and clarifier and -- my personal favorite -- "flocculant." Oh, and
some water, if there's any room left.
Who do we put in charge of such hazardous chemicals? The local fire
department's "hazmat" team? The Environmental Protection Agency? No, we
leave it to the homeowners.
We give them little kits with test tubes and dyes and potions, and easy
access to all the chemicals needed to purify their pools. As for training,
pool owners are given a hearty, "You're on your own." Then they're qualified
to play Pool Man the Chemist.
It's a wonder we haven't all bleached ourselves to death.
This is not what homeowners have in mind when they decide to take the plunge
into pool ownership. They picture themselves blissfully floating on an air
mattress, holding a drink with an umbrella in it, while grateful children
paddle around, shouting hosannas about parents who know how to have "fun."
Hahaha on that. I've been a pool owner for three years now (since we moved
into a house that came with one already in place), and I can tell you that
idyllic summer moment happens, um, never.
Yes, the pool's right outside. Yes, it looks enticing. And, OK, yeah, the
children do seem to enjoy jumping into it over and over, a jillion times,
until all the water has splashed out and killed the lawn. But then there are
the negatives:
1. The water is co-o-o-old. It was after Father's Day before I made my first
plunge this year, and, in minutes, I was as blue as the pool.
2. The children are never grateful. They don't think we're "fun" parents
because we supply an oversized bathtub out back. To them, parents have one
role where the pool is concerned: We are targets for cannonballs.
3. Swimming seems like good exercise until you try it in your average
residential pool. You can't swim in a pool that size. All you can do is turn
around. Stroke, stroke, stroke. TURN. Stroke, stroke, stroke. TURN. You'll
get dizzy before you burn any calories.
4. There's all that maintenance, including the cleaning of filters and the
monitoring of electronic equipment (Water and electricity together.
Shocking!) and the handling of chemicals labeled with more warnings than
your standard package of bubonic plague virus.
It's so easy to make a mistake. Not enough chemicals and cleaning, and your
pool quickly turns into a green breeding ground for the Swamp Thing. Too
much, and the children run round red-eyed and wailing while their hair falls
out. Such alarm can make a parent spill his drink.
Let the chemistry get far enough out of balance, and the toxic stew can eat
the concrete and leave a headline-grabbing sinkhole.
Then, next time you're on a plane, you can point with pride: "My house? Why,
it's right there. The one with the big brown freckle."
Redding, Calif., author Steve Brewer's latest book is called "Bank Job."
Contact him at ABQBrewer(at)aol.com.