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any source would be appreciated

2007-01-22 05:48:39 · 7 answers · asked by jason 1 in Sports Swimming & Diving

7 answers

You can't be serious. There must be hundreds of thousands, between residential, hotels, neighboorhoods, communities, schools, YMCAs. I can't imagine you could get an accurate number.
Just trying to track the residential ones would be near impossible.
Think about the options:
- permanent in-ground pools
- semi-permanent above-ground pools
- seasonal-only above-ground pools
And that's only the ones that are outdoors - and do you count hot tubs?

2007-01-22 05:55:34 · answer #1 · answered by ezgoin92 5 · 0 0

contained in the united states one "lap" is definitely one length of the pool. This in many cases is 25 yards- although there are older swimming pools that are 20 yards and better swimming pools that are 50 yards. interior some thing else of the international one "lap" continues to be one length of the pool, notwithstanding the length is in meters. Olympic distances are swum in 50 meter swimming pools. There are international files in "lengthy direction" and "short direction". NCAAs swim in yards, in certain circumstances 25 and different cases 50 relying on the power. the in user-friendly words income to swimming "short direction" is that a swimmer has more advantageous turns the position they could income leverage and in turn speed, by technique of pushing off the wall with their legs (larger/more acceptable muscle crew). So, the lengthy and short of that is this. One lap ability from the starting up aspect to the first wall that you come back in contact with.

2016-12-02 21:49:28 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

roughly 2 million pools (hot tubs not included)

2007-01-22 05:56:52 · answer #3 · answered by blood 2 · 0 0

yea and how many poeple are constipated right now like me and need to crap a big beef turd out there ***..yea and it plunks in the toilet like lead too..lol...fooz

2007-01-22 05:54:04 · answer #4 · answered by miller4000 2 · 0 0

Count for yourself: www.google.com/maps

2007-01-22 05:52:10 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Dozens, I bet.

2007-01-22 05:56:54 · answer #6 · answered by white.sale 3 · 0 0

ha ha why don't you go around counting them all

2007-01-22 05:52:22 · answer #7 · answered by kristi 2 · 0 0

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