Well, we hope we can help you NOT hate your pool!
However, there's no really easy way out of a swamp. If water's fairly cheap where you are -- and you are NOT filling from a well with metals (iron, managanese, etc.) in the water -- refilling may be the easiest way to go.
Depending on how swampy your swamp is, it could take 80 gallons of bleach, and a lot of vacuuming and filter cleaning besides. Having the sand filter will make it easier, since you don't have to remove it to clean it. If your pool has started to change color, from dark swamp green, it may not take 80 gallons. But BRUSH your pool first. If doing so turns it back to dark green . . . it will likely take a LOT of cleaning to get it clear.
You can't really use the trichlor to clean up a mess - it's too hard to dissolve a bunch of it at once. On the other hand, if you get a couple of floaters, you can use the tabs once your swamp is clean.
Think about it, and let me know how you want to.
Regardless of what you do, you need to be able to test your water. So, go ahead and order a Taylor K2006 (or 2006C, with 3x the # of tests). There is an Amazon link in my signature. When you get to Amazon, check the kit seller, and if it's not Amato Industries, hold off a day till they restock. Some of the other sellers -- we haven't had a chance to see which is which -- ship K2005 kits instead of K2006 models.
By the way, if you do drain, it might be easier if you use your vacuum hose and vacuum head to set up a siphon, and then vacuum the goop on the bottom out onto the ground. If you've brushed first, and then vacuum all that goop out, you can probably leave 6" - 12" in the pool, pour in 5 gallons of bleach, mix, and then start refilling. But, you do want to remove as much algae sludge as possible!
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