bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
OP, I don't know what I would do. It would be a serious problem for us, if we paid extra to heat the pool and then the owner completely and totally failed on having a heated pool for us.
YOu can't actually HEAT a pool if the pump isn't working. You have to be able to "swirl" the heated water around, and without the pump you're up the creek.
My brother, who swims for a workout and not for pleasure, keeps his pool on the cool side. His wife won't set foot in the pool at the temperature he keeps it at (she doesn't have time to swim for any reason so it's no big deal). I can, but I'm splashing around, shivering the whole time. My son will not, can not, go in that water.
And that's with it heated to some extent. When their pump broke and their pool guy was playing around with being an idiot for a few months, NO ONE went in that pool, and they live in San Diego!
I kinda feel the same way, if they don't refund when part of their property becomes unusable. If my house became unusable in some way, my landlady would fix it in a flash. If she couldn't, she would give us money off the rent. I expect the same from a short term rental as well.
An unheated pool, when you have a full expectation of being able to use it, is NOT a minor thing.
I bet you *could* get compensation of some kind, if you truly could not swim at Disney. But Cheshire-Figment says that they are heated to at least 80, which isn't frigid. It isn't as warm as my sister in law likes it (she likes it when their pool is set at nearly 90, when you can barely MOVE in it without starting to sweat and get fainty), but moving around just a bit keeps YOU warm.
Even solar heat requires a pump to move that water around, as far as my brother has taught me. With my brother's pool, they also have the water sent up to small hoses on the roof, and that requires a pump as well.
Without the cover, I know with my brother's pool, it loses, not only tons of heat, but tons of WATER, as well. The amount of water lost to evaporation can cause him (San Diego, not even Orlando) to have to add more water every week or less. Not having a cover on that pool is possibly costing your tenants quite a bit of money. I might reconsider, if I were you.
A pool is useable whether the pump works or not.
YOu can't actually HEAT a pool if the pump isn't working. You have to be able to "swirl" the heated water around, and without the pump you're up the creek.
My brother, who swims for a workout and not for pleasure, keeps his pool on the cool side. His wife won't set foot in the pool at the temperature he keeps it at (she doesn't have time to swim for any reason so it's no big deal). I can, but I'm splashing around, shivering the whole time. My son will not, can not, go in that water.
And that's with it heated to some extent. When their pump broke and their pool guy was playing around with being an idiot for a few months, NO ONE went in that pool, and they live in San Diego!
Leave us your rental links so we know which properties to avoid.
I kinda feel the same way, if they don't refund when part of their property becomes unusable. If my house became unusable in some way, my landlady would fix it in a flash. If she couldn't, she would give us money off the rent. I expect the same from a short term rental as well.
An unheated pool is MINOR ...
As for Disney--they have "heated" pools, but they are not temps I am comfortable to swim in. Temps vary from frigid (but not hypothermia inducing) to slightly tolerable. But I don't get discounts if I can't swim even though the expectation is that I could swim if I chose to do so.
....
We don't charge extra for pool heat. It is solar. In winter, the pool needs a cover for the heat to retain. Tenant found our cover in horrible shape and it had to be tossed. We were not able to replace it. Forgot about it until this post. Unfortunately due to the magnitude of cost even after insurance of all that we MUST do, there will be no pool cover replacement. This shortens their swimmable season from about 10.5 months to 9. We won't reduce
Rent as we are under market.
An unheated pool, when you have a full expectation of being able to use it, is NOT a minor thing.
I bet you *could* get compensation of some kind, if you truly could not swim at Disney. But Cheshire-Figment says that they are heated to at least 80, which isn't frigid. It isn't as warm as my sister in law likes it (she likes it when their pool is set at nearly 90, when you can barely MOVE in it without starting to sweat and get fainty), but moving around just a bit keeps YOU warm.
Even solar heat requires a pump to move that water around, as far as my brother has taught me. With my brother's pool, they also have the water sent up to small hoses on the roof, and that requires a pump as well.
Without the cover, I know with my brother's pool, it loses, not only tons of heat, but tons of WATER, as well. The amount of water lost to evaporation can cause him (San Diego, not even Orlando) to have to add more water every week or less. Not having a cover on that pool is possibly costing your tenants quite a bit of money. I might reconsider, if I were you.