Before you open the filters, take pictures of the piping, valves, the pump and filter, and the pool. Be sure to get good pictures of all the labels on the pump and the filter. Look and see if there's any other equipment, like a Nature2, salt system, ionizer or whatever -- if you see it, take a picture of it whether you know what it is or not. Digital pics are cheap! We can toss any that aren't needed. Post those with Flickr, Google Drive, Webshots . . . . or email them to poolforum@gmail.com.
Meanwhile, order a K2006. You WILL need that with the inground pool. Link to Amazon in my signature block. Read the Best Guess page, linked in my signature, and report your CYA (stabilizer) level in the inground (IG) pool ASAP.
Also, measure the length & width of the pool, and the depth of the deep end. We'll need that to calculate volume and doses.
You can use PLAIN 8.25% household bleach at the rate of about 1/2 gallon per dose per 10,000 gallons, to add about 3 ppm of chlorine to your pool. Get a cheap local OTO/phenol red test kit (yellow/red drops) and use it. Maintain dark yellow chlorine levels. (If in doubt, chlorinate more!) If you see that chlorine drops very little from day to day, then your stabilizer levels are high -- in that case, chlorinate to very dark yellow, even with an orange-ish tint.
Good luck, and thanks to you and your husband for your service.
I have first cousins who were in the Marines, and I know the price their families paid. One retired two years ago after 30+ years, but he's still doing work he can't talk about, mostly overseas! However, his wife is happy that his 'deployments' are much shorter now, and the rides home much nicer!
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