Bringing your chlorine level down would probably be fine . . . but you can almost certainly swim now!
Skin is VERY chlorine resistant. Swimsuits, not so much. So, if the chlorine is high wear old swimsuits, or depending on who's home and how your fences are, just skip them altogether - unless you are worried about the NSA seeing something.
Odd fact: when new users register and include their address, I check it on Google Maps. It's a quick and easy way to see exclude hackers, spammers and so on. So . . . having seen literally 100's, maybe 1,000's of pools on Google satellite view, I have *never* seen a pool with someone in it. (And yes, you can tell. I can usually tell the shape of a pool, whether it's in-ground or above-ground, and whether it has a d-board or a slide..) Makes me wonder if Google has some software routine that auto-magically removes people from home pools and pool decks -- I know from having done pool service, that if you show up at home pools unexpectedly, and don't announce yourself loudly, you can sometimes see more than is good for customer relations.Google may have decided it was smart, on their part, to never display people that might be in pools, and might, or might not have suits on.


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