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Pool opening · Nevada

When to Open Your Pool in Sunrise Manor, NV: Best Dates & Checklist

Last updated: July 15, 2026 · Model window year: 2026 · dates · checklist · FAQ

March 2 is the date to circle in Sunrise Manor. It buys two weeks of cold, algae-proof water ahead of the local 61°F crossing (March 16 in the 1991–2020 normals) and puts you in the pool store weeks before the seasonal crowd. This page tracks today's estimated water temperature, the full window, and every opening step in order.

Live water estimate

SEASONAL VIEW

Estimated unheated pool water temp (site model, ±5°F). The live estimate loads in your browser from Open-Meteo air temperatures; in a typical year Sunrise Manor water runs about 48°F at its winter floor and 93°F at its summer peak.

40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 58 open 65 algae

Sunrise Manor opening dates at a glance

Site model of NOAA 1991–2020 daily normals for N Las Vegas (5.4 mi from Sunrise Manor city center). Dates are typical-year guidance, not forecasts.
Open by (recommended)March 2
Opening windowFebruary 23 – March 16
61°F crossing (7-day mean)March 16
Closing windowNovember 7 – November 17
Close by (deadline)November 17
First freeze, 50% probabilityDecember 8
Swim-season length (80°F+ days)194 days
NOAA normals stationN Las Vegas · 5.4 mi · 1898 ft

Closing is close to optional here — many Sunrise Manor owners trade the cover for shorter pump hours and swim the shoulder seasons. If you do close, the late window above still applies.

Put dates aside and follow the water: the Sunrise Manor curve says roughly 66°F by mid-April, 85°F by mid-June, 92°F in mid-August, then back down through 74°F in mid-October. The summer ceiling sits near 93°F, and every window above is just a line drawn on this curve.

The 12-step Sunrise Manor opening checklist

Built for Sunrise Manor's window: physical teardown first, a full day of circulation, then chemistry per each product's label. Nothing here requires a pro, but step 1 goes easier with a second pair of hands.

  1. Pump off and clear the winter cover

    Start with the cover: pump the puddles off, sweep the leaves, and fold it back in sections so nothing slides into the water. Everything the cover caught all winter stays out of your chemistry budget.

  2. Top up the water level

    Set the garden hose in and bring the level to the skimmer's midpoint. That height is what lets the skimmer pull a proper surface current once the pump starts.

  3. Remove winter plugs and reinstall fittings

    Collect every expansion plug and the skimmer bottle, then put back the return fittings, baskets, and rails. Inspect gaskets while they're in your hand — this is the cheapest moment to replace one.

  4. Reassemble the equipment pad

    Put the pad back together methodically — plugs, lubed o-rings, unions — and leave every valve where you can see it. A photo from last fall makes this a ten-minute job.

  5. Prime the pump and run for 24 hours

    Pour water into the pump housing, crack the filter's air relief, and fire it up. Give the system a continuous day of runtime before you draw any conclusions about the water.

  6. Service the filter

    Whatever the media — cartridge, sand, or DE — start the season with it clean, following the manual's procedure. A half-clogged filter turns a two-day clearing into a week.

  7. Brush, skim, and vacuum

    Sweep the whole shell — walls, steps, floor — then skim and vacuum what you raised. Removing solids mechanically is the cheapest chemical treatment there is, because it isn't one.

  8. Test the water

    Run the full panel — pH, alkalinity, calcium, stabilizer, sanitizer — with strips or drops that aren't left over from two seasons ago. Every dose that follows depends on this reading being real.

  9. Balance, then shock — per product labels

    Fix alkalinity first (it steadies everything else), then pH, each dosed exactly as its label reads for your gallons. Close the day with a label-dosed startup shock and an overnight pump run.

  10. Filter until the water clears

    From here it's cycles: run the filter long, test daily, top up doses only as labels direct, and wait for the floor to come into focus. Resist the urge to dump in more chemistry — clarity is mostly filtration.

  11. Inspect for winter damage

    Walk the deck, coping, and tile line looking for new cracks, and watch the pad for drips during the first day of runtime. Catching a weep in February 23 beats a leak hunt in June.

  12. Clean, dry, and store the cover

    Scrub the cover with a soft brush and mild cleaner, rinse, and let it dry fully before folding. A dry, shaded bin keeps mildew and rodents away until fall.

What to buy before the rush

The March crowd empties shelves in a predictable order. This is the short list worth owning before Sunrise Manor's window opens — nothing exotic, just the stuff everyone needs the same weekend.

  • 7-way test strips

    Five readings in one dip; buy fresh — strips age out.

  • Start-up shock

    Label-dosed oxidizer that sets sanitizer control while water is still cold.

  • Filter cartridge / DE refill

    Clean media on day one shortens the cloudy phase by days.

  • Leaf net + wall brush

    Wall brush plus deep net — the manual half of every checklist.

  • Robotic pool cleaner

    The premium shortcut: set it in, plug in, come back to clean.

  • Pool opening chemical kit

    One box covers balancing and startup for most residential volumes.

How Sunrise Manor compares locally

Within Nevada, Sunrise Manor's March 2 target lands in the earliest quarter of our model dates. For a sanity check against neighbors: North Las Vegas, 8 miles out, pencils in March 2 (the same day), while Paradise runs March 3. Differences under a week are noise — same air mass, different microclimates. The fall half of the plan lives in the Sunrise Manor closing guide; the full-season view shows the year at a glance.

Local means local: Sunrise Manor's dates come from N Las Vegas, the nearest station with complete daily temperature normals — 5.4 miles northwest, about 1898 feet up. Between that station and a Clark County backyard there's always a degree or two of microclimate; the windows are built wide enough to carry it.

Field notes for Sunrise Manor owners

Deck day before water day

Rinse the deck, furniture, and planters before the pool goes uncovered. The first gusty afternoon relocates everything loose straight into your clean water, and grit tracked from a winter-dirty deck is the most common source of mystery cloudiness in week one.

Stabilizer: the sunscreen your chlorine needs

Spring sun destroys unstabilized chlorine within hours, which reads as "the pool eats chlorine" when it's really UV. Test cyanuric acid at opening — winter rain and splash-out dilute it — and restore it per the product label before judging your sanitizer consumption.

The pollen weeks

Tree pollen arrives right around opening time and sails through most filters. A skimmer sock catches the bulk of it for pennies; brushing the waterline daily keeps the yellow film from bonding to tile. It looks alarming and means almost nothing chemically — filter, skim, repeat.

When the season runs 194 days

A Sunrise Manor pool works most of the calendar, and long duty cycles change the maintenance math: filters clean on schedule (not on symptoms), pump seals and bearings get listened to, and the annual reset happens at opening because there's no other natural pause. Budget the March 2 weekend as a real service date, not just a cover-off party.

The desert triad: dust, evaporation, calcium

Around Sunrise Manor, the enemies aren't leaves and frost — they're airborne grit, a quarter-inch of daily summer evaporation, and hard fill water concentrating minerals with every top-off. The counters are boring and effective: brush after every blow, log the water level weekly, and watch calcium hardness climb so you can act before scale does.

Sunrise Manor pool opening FAQ

What water temperature causes pool algae?

Roughly 65°F is where algae shift from dormant to hungry, and growth keeps speeding up as water warms toward the 80s. Cold water is your ally: open while Sunrise Manor's water is still cool — the model crossing lands around March 16 — and sanitizer establishes control before biology gets a vote.

What temperature should it be outside to open a pool?

Think in weekly averages, not single sunny days. Once the 7-day mean temperature reaches the low 60s°F — March 16 in Sunrise Manor, per NOAA normals — water warms into algae territory within days. A 70°F-afternoon stretch is the same signal read off a thermometer instead of a dataset.

Is it cheaper to open a pool early or late?

An early open costs pump runtime; a late open risks an algae recovery, and recoveries are where budgets die — multiple shock doses, days of continuous filtration, and occasionally professional help. Opening Sunrise Manor by March 2, while water is cold, is the cheap insurance version.

How long after opening can you swim?

Swim when three things line up: the water has gone visually clear, your test kit shows levels holding in label ranges, and the interval printed on any shock product's label has passed. Cold-water openings near March 2 typically get there fastest because there's less to correct.

What chemicals do I need to open a pool?

Plan on five categories: testing (strips or a kit), balancers for pH and alkalinity, stabilizer, sanitizer, and an opening shock. Many stores bundle these as opening kits sized by pool volume. Whatever you buy, the product label — not a rule of thumb — sets the dose.

When do most people open pools in NV?

Nationally, early-to-mid May and the Memorial Day weekend dominate — which is why late openers meet empty shelves and week-long service waits. Our Nevada model medians out at March 7 across 9 cities, and Sunrise Manor pencils in March 2, comfortably ahead of the rush.

Data: NOAA 1991–2020 climate normals via N Las Vegas (5.4 mi); live outlook by Open-Meteo. Full attribution on the sources page. Model assumptions and error bars on methodology.