The reason for the dilution method (shot glass) is to force a test kit to read higher if your chlorine level is higher than the maximum the kit can read. It does lose some accuracy with the dilution, but is better than nothing. Glad you ordered the good kit. That will make things a lot easier for you.
You have a large volume pool at 25,000. You can go ahead and add all 5 gallons at one time, but just pour it in very slowly in front of the return jet. Bleach is denser than water and if you pour it in too fast, it will sink and can damage the liner. By pouring it very slowly, it quickly disperses into the water. After you add it, wait a couple of hours and then retest. (Your chlorine should be pretty high so this is when you'll need to use the dilution method.) Then, you can add more bleach --- however much you need to get it back up to 10-12 ppm. The more often you can do this, the faster this pool will clear and those grandbabies can swim!
I don't know where else to get sand. Maybe someone will chime in with ideas about that but you do need to get pool sand. "Play sand" like you would use in a child's sandbox will not work. Sounds like you got a good price on that bleach.
Gotta run and be a mom for a bit so off the forum for a little while. But, I'll check back in later and see how you are doing.
By the way --- no apologies needed for putting posts in other places and don't feel like a duh. This is a pretty big forum and sometimes it is a little confusing trying to decide where to post. That is one of the things the moderators do --- moving things around to help organize threads. Not a problem.
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