Why “Shocking” Your Pool Isn’t a One-Time Fix
Shocking a pool gets talked about like it’s a single action, but it’s really a process of raising free chlorine high enough, long enough, to oxidize contaminants and kill algae. When a pool turns green, the root cause is almost always too little effective chlorine relative to what’s in the water. That “shock” word hides the real work: measuring conditions, adding enough liquid chlorine or cal hypo to reach a meaningful ppm target, then testing again because results are not instant. Think of it like cooking: you don’t check a cake after one minute and declare it done, and you can’t add a small dose of chlorine to a swamp and expect a miracle. For pool owners and pool service pros, learning the pool shock process means fewer return trips, faster green pool cleanup, and less frustration when chlorine seems to disappear overnight. A practical starting point for a severely green pool or heavy mustard algae is an aggressive dose that matches the demand. A field proven rule of thum...