Congratulations to Regina W. from Snellville, GA the lucky Grand Prize winner of our $10,000 Pool Makeover Sweepstakes.
Thousands of entries were submitted by homeowners nationwide for a chance to get a cool new look for their pool, and Regina was chosen.
Thank you to all who participated!
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Friday, August 12, 2011
Pool Game - Dolphins Race or Relay
If there are just two players, this game is a race. With four or more players divide into teams and make it a relay.
Each team has a beach ball that the players must move from one end of the pool to the other by pushing the ball with their noses and forehead. If they touch the ball with their hands or any other part of their body they must go back to where that took place and start again.
When the player reaches the end of the pool the next player will do the same until one team is the winner.
Good swimmers can play by swimming in the deep end of the pool or the length of the pool. For a game with non swimmers, play in the shallow end.
Each team has a beach ball that the players must move from one end of the pool to the other by pushing the ball with their noses and forehead. If they touch the ball with their hands or any other part of their body they must go back to where that took place and start again.
When the player reaches the end of the pool the next player will do the same until one team is the winner.
Good swimmers can play by swimming in the deep end of the pool or the length of the pool. For a game with non swimmers, play in the shallow end.
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
ICC-ES Certified
Inspectors’ #1 Choice for Approving Building Codes Are ICC-ES-Certified Products*
Building inspectors and engineers look to the ICC-ES evaluation reports for evidence that the products and systems are code-compliant. Builders can receive a standardized branded swimming pool blueprint coded with an ICC-ES report # — stamped and signed by a licensed engineer!
*Final permit approval is up to the discretion of each individual municipality’s code official
Friday, August 5, 2011
Pool Game - Sharks and Minnows
The game starts out with one person selected as the shark and the rest as the minnows.
Designate one end of the pool as the minnows’ starting point and the other end as the minnows’ goal.
The shark starts in the water at the minnows’ goal, the minnows at their starting point. The minnows must be touching their starting point. The shark then shouts: "Sharks and Minnows, one two three, fishies, fishies swim to me!" after which the minnows may begin to swim to their goal.
The minnows do not need to leave right when the shark calls them over. Minnows can leave their starting point anytime after the shark calls them over. A minnow may return to their starting point at any time during play and be safe from being tagged while touching their starting end.
If the shark manages to tag a minnow, the minnow is out of play and becomes a shark in the next round. After all the minnows have either reached their goal wall or been tagged, the shark(s) swim to the opposite side of the pool from the minnows and the cycle starts again.
The game is played until all of the minnows have been tagged, then the last person tagged becomes the shark who starts the next round.Here are some optional additions to these rules:
- Instead of tagging, sharks must hold some part of the minnow's body for three whole seconds before they become a shark
- No underwater tag: sharks can only tag minnows when some part of the minnow is above water
- Minnows can call "Early bird!" and start swimming to their goal before the shark has called them across. This can be prevented by the shark calling "No early birds!" at the start of the round.
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