Your numbers look pretty good although the alkalinity is high. I don't know that you need to do anything about that for now so unless someone suggests otherwise I would let that be for now.
Are you able to test for CC? As long as CC stays below 0.5 ppm you don't have to shock so you can just keep the chlorine level where you are. If you use pucks, they contain chlorine and CYA so they will make your CYA level rise. As CYA levels rise, then you need to bump up the chlorine levels for them to be equally effective as they are now - you can look at Ben's best guess chart which is stickied in top of the chlorine thread to see how cl relates to CYA.
If your pool usage is regular (meaning you don't have 20 people in it one day and nobody in it the next day) then you should be able to measure out amounts of bleach for people to put in for you. Sunny days will cause chlorine to break down so you will need more than when it is cloudy. After a couple of weeks of testing you should get a good feel for it. You should be able to use the OTO test as a quick and dirty check on the pool frequently to let you know where the chlorine is at. Once a week or after heavy usage you should check for FC vs. CC.
I'm not familiar with the oxy shock so I can't advise you there. Maybe someone else here can. If you plan on using pucks, you shouldn't need to add anything unless the CC level gets above 0.5ppm.
Peter
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