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Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I
was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? -- Nigel M |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Nigel Molesworth wrote in
: I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? Having asked a Microbiologist friend of mine, his answer was that HE would never swim in the pool until it has been drained, cleaned and refilled. Rats carry diseases harmful to man - dead rats rotting in water will encourage may more bacterial growths harmful to man. Hope this is of some help. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Terry wrote in
: Nigel Molesworth wrote in : I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? Having asked a Microbiologist friend of mine, his answer was that HE would never swim in the pool until it has been drained, cleaned and refilled. Rats carry diseases harmful to man - dead rats rotting in water will encourage may more bacterial growths harmful to man. Hope this is of some help. I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. But this is an educated guess rather than an expert opinion. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Nigel Molesworth wrote:
a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? I thought it was made by fermenting rice, not rats and bleach :-) |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 12:19:48 +0100, Nigel Molesworth
wrote: I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? Were the rats trying to desert the swimming pool for some reason when they went to a far, far better place? -- Regards, Mike Halmarack Drop the (EGG) to email me. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:27:16 GMT, Terry
wrote: Nigel Molesworth wrote in : I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? Having asked a Microbiologist friend of mine, his answer was that HE would never swim in the pool until it has been drained, cleaned and refilled. Doing some googling is very unencouraging, here's a start. http://www.le.ac.uk/biology/gat/virtualfc/weil.html I'd empty it and power wash it down with a solution of hypochlorite bleach. DG |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:29:53 GMT, Terry wrote:
I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. I'm not using it for at least two weeks, and you can get Cl remover, so I could put loads in. Did your friend suggest a ppm value? -- Nigel M |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 12:57:42 +0100, Andy Burns wrote:
Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? I thought it was made by fermenting rice, not rats and bleach :-) Dyslexia rules KO ;-) -- Nigel M |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 12:19:48 +0100, Nigel Molesworth wrote:
I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? When I open my pool, I usually add about 10/12 litres of (22%) liquid chlorine to the water anyway. It decomposes quite quickly, so shouldn't present a problem. I've not had dead rats, but I've certainly fished out the occasional dead hedgehog - and do they pong when they're decomposing! -- the dot wanderer at tesco dot net |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
In article
Nigel Molesworth wrote: I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Leave a few bits of thick rope dangling over the edge next year, then if any more fall in they'll be able to climb out. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
In message , Nigel
Molesworth writes I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? Don't you mean alcohol ? -- geoff |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Nigel Molesworth wrote:
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:29:53 GMT, Terry wrote: I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. I'm not using it for at least two weeks, and you can get Cl remover, so I could put loads in. Did your friend suggest a ppm value? my mrs, a microbiologist, could work that out in 2 mins flat and clorine isn't the best solution for your problem. pun intended. shame you were rude to me, isn't it ? |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 12:19:48 +0100, Nigel Molesworth wrote:
Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need ... My bro in law has put this in perspective, he's a pest control officer. He quite rightly said that rats die all the time in our (drinking) water reservoirs, and that low level of chlorine is enough to kill off the bugs. -- Nigel M |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 19:06:59 +0100, Nigel Molesworth
wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 12:19:48 +0100, Nigel Molesworth wrote: Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need ... My bro in law has put this in perspective, he's a pest control officer. He quite rightly said that rats die all the time in our (drinking) water reservoirs, and that low level of chlorine is enough to kill off the bugs. No, he's put it out of perspective. Rats dying in a reservoir are in millions of gallons of water, your pool contains a few gallons. Empty the thing out, clean and refill. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 19:35:33 GMT, EricP
wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 19:06:59 +0100, Nigel Molesworth wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 12:19:48 +0100, Nigel Molesworth wrote: Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need ... My bro in law has put this in perspective, he's a pest control officer. He quite rightly said that rats die all the time in our (drinking) water reservoirs, and that low level of chlorine is enough to kill off the bugs. No, he's put it out of perspective. Rats dying in a reservoir are in millions of gallons of water, Yes but they're homeopathic rats. your pool contains a few gallons. Conventional rats. Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Homeopathic rats. -- Regards, Mike Halmarack Drop the (EGG) to email me. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Mike Halmarack ... wrote in news:4ca5421a1obq4qpqi4lt7kqtjg9f1uipb2@
4ax.com: snip No, he's put it out of perspective. Rats dying in a reservoir are in millions of gallons of water, Yes but they're homeopathic rats. your pool contains a few gallons. Conventional rats. Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Homeopathic rats. So the more you empty, clean, refill, the stronger they (rats and/or bugs) get? -- Rod |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
"Nigel Molesworth" wrote in message
... I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? Hmmm - I thought Sake was made with rice - not dead rats and a swimming pool - oh well - you live and learn ;-) Cheers dan |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 16:25:30 GMT, "." wrote:
Nigel Molesworth wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:29:53 GMT, Terry wrote: I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. I'm not using it for at least two weeks, and you can get Cl remover, so I could put loads in. Did your friend suggest a ppm value? my mrs, a microbiologist, could work that out in 2 mins flat and clorine isn't the best solution for your problem. pun intended. shame you were rude to me, isn't it ? Do you really think he gives a flying f*ck? -- |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On 16 Apr 2006 20:41:48 GMT, Rod wrote:
Mike Halmarack ... wrote in news:4ca5421a1obq4qpqi4lt7kqtjg9f1uipb2@ 4ax.com: snip No, he's put it out of perspective. Rats dying in a reservoir are in millions of gallons of water, Yes but they're homeopathic rats. your pool contains a few gallons. Conventional rats. Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Homeopathic rats. So the more you empty, clean, refill, the stronger they (rats and/or bugs) get? Not only that but they send out for Lilos and floating champagne buckets. -- Regards, Mike Halmarack Drop the (EGG) to email me. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Matt wrote:
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 16:25:30 GMT, "." wrote: Nigel Molesworth wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:29:53 GMT, Terry wrote: I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. I'm not using it for at least two weeks, and you can get Cl remover, so I could put loads in. Did your friend suggest a ppm value? my mrs, a microbiologist, could work that out in 2 mins flat and clorine isn't the best solution for your problem. pun intended. shame you were rude to me, isn't it ? Do you really think he gives a flying f*ck? hahahahaha. are you his bf ? |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 21:34:30 +0100, Mike Halmarack ... wrote:
No, he's put it out of perspective. Rats dying in a reservoir are in millions of gallons of water, Yes but they're homeopathic rats. 10/10 :))) your pool contains a few gallons. Conventional rats. Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Homeopathic rats. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
.. wrote in message ... Nigel Molesworth wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:29:53 GMT, Terry wrote: I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. I'm not using it for at least two weeks, and you can get Cl remover, so I could put loads in. Did your friend suggest a ppm value? my mrs, a microbiologist, could work that out in 2 mins flat And you are no doubt the rocket scientist of the family, but then you don't seen to have a clue what to call yourself. - |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Mike Halmarack wrote:
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 19:35:33 GMT, EricP wrote: No, he's put it out of perspective. Rats dying in a reservoir are in millions of gallons of water, Yes but they're homeopathic rats. post of the week! |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
In message , .
writes Mark wrote: . wrote in message ... Nigel Molesworth wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:29:53 GMT, Terry wrote: I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. I'm not using it for at least two weeks, and you can get Cl remover, so I could put loads in. Did your friend suggest a ppm value? my mrs, a microbiologist, could work that out in 2 mins flat And you are no doubt the rocket scientist of the family, employee to opportunist to employer. but then you don't seen to have a clue what to call yourself. my dad said he wanted to name me /mark/ but he quipped that "mark" sounded like a dog with a hare lip. what you see is what you get. So they called you "Twot" then ? -- geoff |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Mark wrote:
. wrote in message ... Nigel Molesworth wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:29:53 GMT, Terry wrote: I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. I'm not using it for at least two weeks, and you can get Cl remover, so I could put loads in. Did your friend suggest a ppm value? my mrs, a microbiologist, could work that out in 2 mins flat And you are no doubt the rocket scientist of the family, employee to opportunist to employer. but then you don't seen to have a clue what to call yourself. my dad said he wanted to name me /mark/ but he quipped that "mark" sounded like a dog with a hare lip. what you see is what you get. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Nigel Molesworth wrote:
I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? Fr sake, its the alcohol, not the chlorine level you need to increase. Around 15% IIRC. Dead rats are an essential part of cider making allegedly, so look forward to a vintage year ;-) |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 19:35:33 GMT, EricP wrote:
No, he's put it out of perspective. Rats dying in a reservoir are in millions of gallons of water, your pool contains a few gallons. Not where I live, the reservoir is almost empty :( Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Can't hosepipe ban, see above. I've been advised by a pool company to get the Cl to 15ppm and circulate for 8 hours. So I've doubled that. -- Nigel M |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Nigel Molesworth wrote in Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Can't hosepipe ban, see above. "The hosepipe ban will apply to watering plants and car washing at residential addresses, but there will be no restrictions on using a hose to fill up a swimming pool" http://www.poolstore.co.uk/ishop/691/shopscr453.html http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4870940.stm - |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Mon, 17 Apr 2006 12:14:31 +0100, Nigel Molesworth
wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 19:35:33 GMT, EricP wrote: No, he's put it out of perspective. Rats dying in a reservoir are in millions of gallons of water, your pool contains a few gallons. Not where I live, the reservoir is almost empty :( Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Can't hosepipe ban, see above. Pools aren't covered. The BEEB was going on about it a day ago. Only car washing and plant watering. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Mon, 17 Apr 2006 15:29:00 UTC, "Mark" wrote:
Nigel Molesworth wrote in Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Can't hosepipe ban, see above. "The hosepipe ban will apply to watering plants and car washing at residential addresses, but there will be no restrictions on using a hose to fill up a swimming pool" http://www.poolstore.co.uk/ishop/691/shopscr453.html http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4870940.stm It varies, depending on the water company. -- The information contained in this post is copyright the poster, and specifically may not be published in, or used by Avenue Supplies, http://avenuesupplies.co.uk |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 19:35:33 GMT, EricP wrote:
Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Just got a reply from the Leptospirosis Information Center "The free chlorine levels in typical public pools (2 to 4 ppm) are sufficient to kill all pathogenic leptospires given enough time. The standard data comes from a set of studies conducted in the late 1950's (Alston J & Broom J, Leptospirosis in man and animals, Livingstone Press London 1958), which proved lethality within 45 minutes at 3.5ppm. Also, with a private pool there is less volume exchange than public pools, so a 2 to 4 ppm level would be more than adequate for safety." -- Nigel M |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Tue, 18 Apr 2006 08:45:30 +0100, Andy Hall
wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 13:21:53 +0100, Mike Halmarack ... wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 12:19:48 +0100, Nigel Molesworth wrote: I've just started to get my swimming pool ready after the winter. I was hooking out a load of leaves then spotted a pair of dead rats! Any suggestions on the ppm level of Cl I need to make it sake? Were the rats trying to desert the swimming pool for some reason when they went to a far, far better place? It's lemmings that do that..... I suppose a deadly drop can open the door to an improved environment for some. -- Regards, Mike Halmarack Drop the (EGG) to email me. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
in 522880 20060418 084530 Andy Hall wrote:
It's lemmings that do that..... That's a myth. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Bob Eager wrote:
"Mark" wrote: Nigel Molesworth wrote in Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Can't hosepipe ban, see above. "The hosepipe ban will apply to watering plants and car washing at residential addresses, but there will be no restrictions on using a hose to fill up a swimming pool" http://www.poolstore.co.uk/ishop/691/shopscr453.html http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4870940.stm It varies, depending on the water company. Really? Why do you think that? |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 21:02:07 GMT, "." wrote:
Matt wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 16:25:30 GMT, "." wrote: Nigel Molesworth wrote: On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 11:29:53 GMT, Terry wrote: I should have added that in his opinion, the level of Chlorine needed to "make it safe" would be nearing the toxicity level. I'm not using it for at least two weeks, and you can get Cl remover, so I could put loads in. Did your friend suggest a ppm value? my mrs, a microbiologist, could work that out in 2 mins flat and clorine isn't the best solution for your problem. pun intended. shame you were rude to me, isn't it ? Do you really think he gives a flying f*ck? hahahahaha. are you his bf ? Carry on like that and you might end up wishing your wife was a barrister rather than a microbiologist. -- |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
"Nigel Molesworth" wrote in message ... On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 19:35:33 GMT, EricP wrote: Empty the thing out, clean and refill. Just got a reply from the Leptospirosis Information Center "The free chlorine levels in typical public pools (2 to 4 ppm) are sufficient to kill all pathogenic leptospires given enough time. The standard data comes from a set of studies conducted in the late 1950's (Alston J & Broom J, Leptospirosis in man and animals, Livingstone Press London 1958), which proved lethality within 45 minutes at 3.5ppm. Also, with a private pool there is less volume exchange than public pools, so a 2 to 4 ppm level would be more than adequate for safety." -- Nigel M I agree with this. Too high a level of chlorine, particularly combined with a low pH, can lead to chloramine formation which is not pleasant for swimming. |
Something nasty in the swimming pool ...
Andy Hall wrote:
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006 13:21:53 +0100, Mike Halmarack ... wrote: Were the rats trying to desert the swimming pool for some reason when they went to a far, far better place? It's lemmings that do that..... Simple solution then - fill the pool with lemming aid. I'll get my coat................. -- Dave The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
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