After a long Niagara winter, your pool has been sitting under a cover for six months. Opening it properly sets the tone for the entire swim season. Skip a step and you'll fight algae, cloudy water, and equipment problems for weeks. Do it right and you'll be swimming clean by the time the heat hits.
In Niagara Falls and across the Niagara region, the May long weekend (Victoria Day) is the standard pool opening time. The risk of overnight frost has mostly passed, daytime temperatures are climbing, and families want the pool ready for June. Here's how to open a pool the right way after a Canadian winter — from cover removal to that critical first week of care.
1. Remove the Winter Cover
Start by clearing leaves, water, and debris off the top of your winter cover before you touch the anchors. If you pull a cover off while it's loaded with water and debris, you'll dump all of that straight into your pool — and spend the next two days fishing it out.
- Pump off standing water using a submersible cover pump or wet/dry vac.
- Sweep off leaves and debris with a soft broom. Don't push them toward the pool edge.
- Loosen the anchors evenly around the deck, then fold the cover accordion-style as two people lift it off.
- Clean and store the cover — rinse it, let it dry, and store it in a sealed container with a small amount of talc or algaecide to prevent mold over summer.
2. Debris Cleanup and Skimming
Even with a well-secured cover, some debris always finds its way in. Before you reconnect equipment, remove what you can see:
- Use a leaf net or skimmer to remove leaves, twigs, and surface debris.
- Brush the pool walls and floor to loosen winter grime so the filter can catch it once the pump is running.
- Vacuum the pool — either manually or with a robotic cleaner — to remove settled sediment.
3. Inspect Your Equipment
This is the step most homeowners rush through, and it's the one that causes the most costly mid-season breakdowns. Before you fire everything up, check each piece of equipment.
Pump
- Inspect the pump housing for cracks from freezing.
- Check the strainer basket and clean out any debris.
- Lubricate the pump lid O-ring to ensure a proper seal.
- Prime the pump before starting — running dry will burn out the motor.
Filter
- For sand filters, backwash thoroughly before normal operation.
- For cartridge filters, remove and hose down the cartridge. Replace if it's more than 2–3 years old or showing wear.
- For DE filters, clean and recharge with fresh diatomaceous earth.
- Check for cracked manifolds or broken laterals — these cause sand or DE to blow back into the pool.
Heater
- Clear leaves and debris from around the heater cabinet.
- Check for visible corrosion or rodent damage to wiring.
- Verify the gas supply is on and the pilot ignites cleanly.
- If the heater won't fire or throws an error code, don't force it — call a professional.
4. Check the Water Level
Over winter, water levels drop from evaporation and precipitation can push them back up. Before running the pump, bring the water level to the midpoint of the skimmer opening — typically about halfway up the tile line.
- If the water is too low, the pump will draw air and lose prime.
- If it's too high, the skimmer won't function efficiently and surface debris won't be captured.
- Use a garden hose to top up, or drain down with a submersible pump if needed.
5. Chemical Balancing
Once the pump is circulating, let the water run for at least 24 hours before testing. Then bring your water to a pool store for a full analysis, or test at home with a reliable kit. Here are the levels that matter most:
- pH: 7.4–7.6 — if it's off, chlorine won't work effectively and you'll get scaling or eye irritation.
- Total Alkalinity: 80–120 ppm — alkalinity stabilizes pH. Balance this first.
- Free Chlorine: 1–3 ppm — shock the pool on opening to kill off winter algae and bacteria.
- Calcium Hardness: 200–400 ppm — low calcium corrodes equipment; high calcium leaves scaling on tile and heaters.
- Cyanuric Acid (CYA): 30–50 ppm — this stabilizer prevents chlorine from burning off in direct sunlight.
Order matters: Always balance alkalinity first, then pH, then calcium, then chlorine. Adjusting them out of sequence wastes chemicals and money.
6. First-Week Care Tips
The first week after opening is when your pool either stabilizes or goes green. Stay on top of it.
- Run the pump 24/7 for the first 48–72 hours to fully circulate chemicals and filter out debris.
- Brush walls and floor daily for the first week. Algae and scale stick to surfaces — brushing dislodges them so the filter can catch them.
- Test water every 2 days and adjust as needed. Chemistry shifts quickly in the first week.
- Shock the pool again on day 3 or 4 if chlorine demand is high or water is still cloudy.
- Backwash or clean the filter after the first few days — it's working harder now than it will all season.
- Don't swim until water is balanced and clear. Cloudy or green water isn't just unappealing — it's a sign of unhealthy conditions.
When to Call a Professional
If your equipment won't start, you find cracked plumbing, or the water won't clear after a week of treatment, you're past DIY territory. A proper spring opening by a professional runs faster, catches small problems before they become big ones, and ensures your pool is safe and balanced from day one — not day ten.