Try WinterMoss even if you don’t have PoolNaturally® water during the summer! After pool shut down, add the WinterMoss bag directly to your remaining pool water before covering for the season. Improves water quality over the winter and makes for an easier pool start up in the spring. For pools up to 50,000 gallons.
Purchase WinterMoss here
Regions Hospital, St. Paul, MN, is the first hospital in Minnesota to use Sphagnum moss to treat the water in its therapy pool. The moss treatment system is part of HealthPartners Health Goals 2014.Watch movie online The Transporter Refueled (2015)
Introduction
It’s all about hydrogen ions and water. Hydrogen, you remember, the most abundant molecule on earth, is in the upper right-hand corner of the periodic table of elements. It is just one proton and one electron. Two hydrogen molecules combine with one oxygen molecule to form water. The hydrogen ion (H+) in water has a positive charge; the mirror image chemical is the hydroxyl ion (OH-) that has a negative charge. These two ions are like a teeter-totter. When one is up, the other is down. An acid has a high concentration of hydrogen ions and a low concentration of hydroxyl ions. A base is just the opposite. Put an acid and a base together carefully because they react with vigor to make water and release a lot of energy.
To understand pH, buffers, total alkalinity, and chlorine in any body of water like a pool, spa, pond or drinking water, you have to understand hydrogen ions. [Read more…]
Sunrise to sunset…the hum of the city…the twinkling of the city lights…Life’s better…sitting on your very own high-rise deck atop the Park in your very own SpaBerry. Soak away the day’s stresses…enjoy some time with a loved one…enjoy the view…and truly…Live on the Park!
For more information go to http://www.liveonthepark.com or www.thespaberry.com
The Park has just taken “Urban Living” a major step forward and have done what no other high-rise in North America has ever done before. A first for Calgary…a first for Canada…and first for the world…The Park is raising the bar for the urban lifestyle by offering personal luxury spas from SpaBerry to over 100 decks.
“We wanted to give our customers who have been asking us for spas what they wanted. The SpaBerry fits perfectly into our clients’ lifestyles and is designed specifically with downtown condo living in mind” says Richard Lobsinger…VP of Sales & Marketing for the Park
“We are very excited to partner with Lake Placid Developments Inc (LPDI) on their upscale Urban Development, the Park” says Jeff Knight…President of SpaBerry Personal Luxury Spas. LPDI is setting the bar for other high-rise developments throughout the world with this project!
The publication of a recent article in the February, 2012 issue of the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology adds to the evidence, and increasing concern, of the unhealthy effects of exposure to disinfection by-products (DBP) in swimming pools. The article, entitled “Airway remodeling and inflammation in competitive swimmers training in indoor chlorinated swimming pools” by Bougault et al provides evidence that intense, long term training in indoor chlorinated swimming pools leads to airway changes similar to those seen in asthma.
The study examined 23 competitive swimmers, age 17 and up. The swimmers were evaluated during a period of rest, at least 3 days after their last competition or strenuous training workout. The evaluation tests included standard lung capacity testing, allergy testing, and bronchoscopy with biopsy collection for pathological evaluation.
The findings of the study demonstrated inflammatory and airway remodeling changes in bronchial biopsies of competing swimmers similar to non-athletes with mild asthma. In fact, some of the measured inflammatory parameters were greater than that seen in asthmatic subjects. A majority of the swimmers had atopy (allergic hyperresponsiveness), an important point according to the authors, “as a recent hypothesis stated that atopy may develop in swimmers because of an increasing exposure to chlorination products.”
Whether recreational swimmers and children will develop these changes remains to be determined. However, according to the authors, “reduction of chloramine exposure in pool environments should be considered.”
Reference:
Airway remodeling and inflammation in competitive swimmers training in indoor chlorinated swimming pools. Bougault, V, Loubaki L, Joubert, P et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2012; Vol. 129(2):351-358
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