Spring opening is a sequence — not “dump chemicals and hope”

Pool opening after winter goes sideways when the order is wrong. Fix circulation first, start the filter clean and record a baseline PSI, then balance water without chasing every number. This page gives you a practical checklist, a “mistake → do this instead” table, and a simple 7-day plan to get from green or cloudy to clear and stable.

What a “successful startup” looks like

Clear water + stable readings (not just “better today”)

A good spring start is when your pool becomes predictable again — not when it merely looks improved for a few hours. Use these as your finish line:

  • Clarity holds: you can see the deepest step (or the floor in the deep end) and it stays that way day to day.
  • Readings stabilise: tests stop swinging wildly because water is circulating and changes are measured.
  • Filter baseline is known: you’ve recorded a clean-start baseline PSI at a consistent pump setting/RPM.
  • Chlorine demand becomes predictable: no more “zero in the morning” after one warm day.
Core principle: green/dirty openings clear fastest with circulation + brushing + filtration consistency. Chemistry supports that process — it doesn’t replace it.

Mechanics first: baskets, brushing, vacuuming, circulation

Do this before you start “fixing numbers”

If the pump won’t prime or the filter is overloaded on Day 1, you can’t trust what you’re seeing in the water — or in your test results. The goal here is to remove unknowns early.

1) Set the water level: bring it to mid-skimmer before attempting to prime the pump.
2) Quick safety scan: check for missing drain plugs, loose unions, cracked fittings, obvious leaks.
3) Clean skimmer + pump baskets: remove debris and ensure lids/O-rings are clean and seated.
4) Brush first: brush walls, steps, and corners to lift winter film into suspension.
5) Vacuum next: remove settled debris (leaf sludge is a huge chlorine sink).
6) Circulate continuously during the “dirty phase”: steady flow helps filtration catch up.
Priming the pump (fast troubleshooting)

Most priming issues are air leaks or low water level. If the pump won’t catch prime, re-check: lid O-ring (clean + lubricated), drain plugs tight, suction fittings snug, and water level high enough to avoid vortexing.

With variable-speed pumps: prime at higher RPM, then reduce once flow is steady.

Filter: start clean and lock in a baseline PSI

This prevents the “cloudy loop” later

Many “pool cloudy after opening” situations are actually filtration problems: the filter was dirty from the start, pressure/flow were never benchmarked, and debris kept re-suspending.

The baseline rule (simple)

Record your clean filter PSI at your normal operating setting (or a chosen RPM for variable speed). Later, you’ll know what “dirty” looks like for your exact system — without guessing.

Backwash / rinse sequence (multiport valves: sand + DE):

  • Backwash until discharge is noticeably clearer (or the sight glass improves).
  • Switch to Rinse briefly to re-seat the bed and avoid blasting debris back into the pool.
  • Return to Filter, then re-check PSI and return flow.
Cartridge filters: there’s no backwash — “clean start” means a proper rinse/clean cycle. Expect more frequent cartridge cleaning during the first week if you opened green.

Chemistry: test order and corrections (without overload)

Order matters more than perfect targets on Day 1

In the first days, aim for control: safe sanitation, stable pH, and enough circulation for reliable testing. Don’t try to perfect everything before the pool is mixed and filtering properly.

Test 1 — Free Chlorine (FC) + CC if available: restore sanitation first if FC is low.
Test 2 — pH: correct in small steps; re-test after mixing.
Test 3 — Stabiliser (CYA): check once circulation is steady; CYA decisions are easier when FC is stable.
Test 4 — TA / CH: tune after the “dirty phase” settles down.
Test 5 — Salt (if SWG): confirm it’s within your chlorinator’s operating range.
If you opened to green water

Think “cleanup mode”: strong circulation, daily brushing, and consistent sanitation. Fast clears come from steady filtration + brushing — not random one-off chemical spikes.

If results stay confusing after the first few days (or demand is extreme), professional testing can prevent wasted chemicals.

Checklist table: Step → Tool → Beginner mistake → Do this instead

Keep this as your “no drama” sequence. The “Do this instead” column is designed to stop the common spring opening mistakes.

Spring startup sequence (4 columns max)
Step Tool Beginner mistake Do this instead
Why it works: remove debris (demand), restore flow (mixing), then filter consistently. Chemistry becomes predictable when the pool stops being a moving target.

Mini plan for the first week (Day 1 / Day 3 / Day 7)

A simple cadence that keeps momentum

You don’t need a complicated schedule — you need a repeatable rhythm: remove debris, keep circulation steady, and re-check after changes.

Week-one plan (3 milestones)
Day Focus What “good” looks like
If you build one habit: track baseline PSI

Write down clean PSI and your chosen pump setting/RPM. When clearing slows, the filter often tells you why before the water does.

FAQ

Start with basics: water level to mid-skimmer, clean baskets, clean and lubricate the lid O-ring, confirm drain plugs are tight, and check suction-side unions/fittings for air leaks. Prime at higher speed (if variable-speed), then reduce once flow is stable.

Cloudy openings are often filtration + debris issues. If the filter wasn’t started clean (baseline PSI unknown) and brushing/vacuuming were skipped, you leave demand in the pool and overload the filter. Fix the order: brush → vacuum → clean/backwash & rinse → restore sanitation → steady circulation → re-test.

High pressure with weak return flow usually means restriction: dirty filter, clogged baskets, partially closed valves, or suction-side issues. Don’t “power through” — re-check and establish a clean baseline PSI first.

It can be normal when organic load is high (winter debris, algae film, leaf sludge). The fix is consistency: daily brushing, strong filtration, and maintaining sanitation without long gaps.

Treat them as special tools, not your default. Most spring cloudiness clears with brushing + filtration + stable sanitation. Clarifiers/floc can backfire if the filter is already overloaded or circulation is inconsistent.

If you’ve restored flow, brushed/vacuumed, started with a clean filter baseline, and you still can’t stabilise within the first week (persistent cloudiness, extreme demand, confusing swings), professional testing can save time and chemicals.

Related seasonal guides

Internal linking (verified URLs)

Use these next once your pool is circulating reliably and clarity is improving:

Tip: If spring weather is unstable (wind + rain), bookmark the “after storms” guide — it prevents the common loop: “clear → storm → cloudy again”.