The weather has been odd this year. There was no true rainy season from July to September for Mérida. Other parts of México and Central America were inundated, some still are. But we had a dry spell. A hot dry spell. It was good for the swim school.
We took a break in late July and traveled around Central America for a few weeks. Upon our return the students were waiting, some chomping at the bit, to get back into the pool. Due to the lack of rain, we cancelled very few classes and all went well through September.
October was rainy. We had one minor cold front pass through, which took some of our younger kids out of the water. The pool cover helps hold in the heat, but the ground gets cold at night and cools down the water temperature. We were also rained out quite a bit this month in the afternoons. It is a shame because we're working with a pretty full schedule.
Pablo gets up at 6am or so and starts to work in the patio. He cleans the pool and puts in the chemicals it needs. He cleans the mats outside and brings out the tools and toys for the day. He has been doing this in the dark. We start class at 8am and by the time we finish at 9am the sun is just peaking over the tree top next door and barely touching the swimming pool. This past weekend we turned the clocks back. At least Pablo can now work in daylight and the sun pops out at 8am instead of 9am. And then came the cold front.
This is a real cold front. This morning, Maestro Pablo, Mike and I did our warm up exercises and got into the pool. (The others are waiting for warmer water!) We walked and ran laps in an attempt to maintain our body heat. The pool measured in at 77°F. The outside air? 71°F. I will admit I RAN from the pool to a hot shower after it was over, but we did it. We all feel better if we do our morning pool exercises.
We have been researching solar heating for the swimming pool half-heartedly for a year. Last year at this time the pool was finally renovated, filled, and ready for swimming and it was too bloody cold! The only swimmers were a Canadian family that house and cat sat for us in December. Oh, and Lynne from Alaska got in the pool just because it was filled the day before her two month stay here ended! Basically you had to be from 36°N or above to think the pool was an option. My friends outside of Mérida tell me: "We northerners still think 75-80°F is warm enough to swim in a pool." Well, we tropical people think if the pool is below 80° it is only melted ice. We get used to the temperature being above 90°F for 24 hours a day from April through September. When it rapidly drops 20° around us we get cold.
Upon our return from vacation in August we started researching in earnest the solar heating system for the pool. Pablo and I separately investigated over the internet, spoke to people, drove around to pool service companies. We talked to everyone listed in the phonebook and newspaper. I searched the Merida Insider and begged the knowledgeable gringos to help. I offered to bring a friend in from Hawaii who could put it together AND explain it to me! To no avail. We were so frustrated. How could this, one of the sunniest places on earth, not have solar power available and inexpensive? It seems to be a waste of energy. Our electric bills go up, we seek sources for energy, and then it is not available or not affordable.
The doorbell just rang. It is the solar system. The guys are here to install the panels on the roof, hook them up to the pool filter, and we are finally, actually, truly heating the pool. Today, folks! October 31, 2008. I imagine it takes a few days for it to actually heat up the pool. I don't know the specifics yet. As I said, the doorbell just rang. Time to learn something new. ¡Viva Solar Power!
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