Skip to main content
188+ Google ReviewsCPO Licensed · C-10537740+ Years
Florida Pool Care · 6 min read · By Ronald Liddell

Florida Sugar Cane Burns: Ash Fallout and Pool Chemistry Impact

Where cane burning happens, what the ash does to pools, and the service adjustments that handle fallout events.

By Ronald Liddell, Partner — Service Operations · Updated · 6 min read

Sugar cane burning in Central and South Florida is a seasonal reality that creates specific pool-service challenges. Between October and March, licensed cane burns send ash across a wide geographic area — sometimes 5–15 miles from the burn site. For pools in the affected regions, the ash creates a predictable chemistry and aesthetic disruption that requires specific handling.

Where cane burning happens

Commercial sugar cane burns occur primarily in:

  • Belle Glade, Pahokee, South Bay (western Palm Beach County)
  • Clewiston, Moore Haven (Hendry and Glades Counties)
  • Sugar-cane-adjacent areas of northern Collier and southern Lee counties
  • The cane-belt region generally west of Lake Okeechobee

Ash fallout affects pools in a radius of 5–15 miles downwind depending on wind direction and burn intensity.

What the ash does to pool water

  • Visual surface coating— a thin gray film on the water surface, visible immediately after a burn event.
  • pH elevation— ash is alkaline; significant ash fallout drives pH up.
  • Phosphate and nutrient addition— ash contains organic material that feeds algae.
  • Filter loading— fine ash particles clog cartridges and load sand filters quickly.
  • Staining potential— if ash sits on plaster for more than 24 hours, it can contribute to localized staining.

Service adjustments during cane season

  • Schedule visits within 24 hours of known burns if possible.
  • Net surface immediately with fine-mesh skimmer.
  • Increase pump runtime2–4 extra hours per day during active burn periods.
  • Clean or backwash filter at 50% pressure rise instead of normal 10 psi threshold.
  • Test pH more frequently— ash can move pH from 7.5 to 8.0+ in a single event.
  • Keep FC elevated(3–4 ppm) during cane season for phosphate/organic-load buffer.

When a major ash event happens

  1. Net the surface immediately — don't let ash sink to the floor.
  2. Pre-test chemistry before adding anything. Expect pH up, alkalinity up, phosphates up.
  3. Lower pH with acid if needed. Don't over-correct; pH will continue drifting down as the ash breaks down.
  4. Super-chlorinate to handle organic load.
  5. Run filtration 24/7 until water clarity returns.
  6. Clean filter after 3–7 days of continuous operation.
  7. Consider phosphate remover if testing shows elevated levels.

Prevention strategies during burn season

  • Pool cover— the most effective physical barrier. If the pool isn't used during burn season, keep it covered.
  • Screen enclosure maintenance— screens can't stop ash but do slow its deposition; keep screens clean.
  • Landscape shields— strategically placed trees on the burn-prevailing-wind side can reduce ash deposition modestly.
  • Monitoring burn schedules— the Florida Forest Service publishes burn authorization information; awareness allows proactive response.

Communicating with customers

  • Set expectations at the start of cane season: “October through March we'll see periodic ash events. We'll adjust service as needed, and you may notice ash film for 1–2 days after a burn.”
  • Explain extra service time if billing reflects it.
  • Document the burn events as part of service notes when adjustments are needed.
Cane burning is a seasonal reality, not a mystery. Pool owners in the affected regions should know what it does, what to expect, and how service responds. A prepared service company makes the event manageable; an unprepared one turns every burn event into a customer complaint.

Want a pro to handle this?

Our CPO-certified techs run this exact playbook on every weekly service visit.

More in this pillar

More in Florida Pool Care