Yes, but its blurry. My pool is just 10 days installed now but just like the ocean I grew up with in Massachusetts, if you throw on goggles it becomes crystal clear. Wow, the lack of chlorine and all its side affects are missing in my salt pool...I thnk I'm gonna like this. A: But you still have chlorine in the pool! You don't have a lack of chlorine in a salt system pool. It is just that it is a more balanced equally distributed system in reply to the above answer.
Not as long as it is maintained properly. Most important is to keep the PH level correct.
I did it today and my eyes feel like this is sand in them. I have been rinsing them with water but they feel irritated
If you are concerned about accidentally swallowing a little bit of pool water, don't be. The ocean's salinity is 35,000 ppm; a pool is 3,500, or 10% of that of the ocean.
It may get bloodshot. Everything is blurry underwater without goggles.
more than likely she has lots of practice. plus, it may not be quite as hard to open you eyes under water in an ocean as it is in a chlorine filled pool. and they also don't stay underwater for so long, everything you see in movies is done in scenes/cuts, so if she couldn't keep her eyes open for much longer... :P
why souldn't it be? ~bluecow798
Ok, the following steps are simple, well sort of simple. # Fill up some water into a bathtub, sink or bowl. Only use fresh water from your sink! Not pool water or you may end up irritating your eyes. # Gently put your face in with your eyes closed for a while until you feel comfortable and get used to the temperature of the water. # When you are used you step 2, open your eyes and gently put them in. Remember you won't get this right in the first place and it may take a few days or so. # Do step 3 until you are able to keep your eyes in fresh water. # You may now do this in a swimming pool or the ocean but remember don't keep your eye's in for long in a pool or the sea or you will irritate your eyes.
There is not a such thing of my bringing my Iphone and it working wirelessly in my pool underwater. Phone Hates water!
water pressure
Chlorine water. Normal fresh water is good and it cleanses your eyes. But chlorine water is fine as long as there's not to much in the pool your eyes may sting and go red afterwards so just splash them with fresh normal water
Because of the reaction of your eyes to ocean water or chlorine. The salt water can affect your eyes in a bad way. If your eyes are open in the ocean for too long, you could die or go blind. In a pool, the thing is chlorine. Your eyes are sensitive to the chemicals.
Scuba training is threefold. Classroom - where you read the instruction manual, learn to read the dive tables, do the homework assignments, take quizzes and take the final exam. Pool - the pool sessions introduce you to the gear, how to assemble it, and how to use it in the water. In addition you will practice the skills your Instructor demonstrates to you underwater. Open Water - You do several open water dives at the conclusion of the classroom and pool sessions. In these dives you will get to demonstrate your mastery of the skills the Instructor taught you in the class out in the open water.
Trick question. The pool is empty but the drain is open. With an open drain, the pool will never fill, unless the water entering exceeds the water draining.True,-----------> 20 hours
Under 5 m of water the pressure will be greater than under 2 m of water. The shape of the body of water is irrelevant.
hahahah close them
That depends. We have a salt system in our pool and I swim with my eyes open all of the time without any irritation or redness. Our 4 year old granddaughter's eyes get very red, swollen and irritated when she goes to the public pool where the chlorine levels are really high. When she comes to our pool her eyes don't react as badly, but if she's been in the pool for several hours without her goggles her eyes do get red.