I have spent 16 seasons repairing and resurfacing residential pools around the Portland area, including plenty of older backyards in West Linn. I usually meet homeowners after the plaster has already turned rough, stained, or patchy enough that brushing no longer helps. I write from the viewpoint of the person standing at the coping with a moisture meter, a pole brush, and a homeowner who wants a straight answer before committing several thousand dollars.
How West Linn Pools Wear Out Differently
I see a different kind of wear in West Linn than I see on flat, sun-baked lots farther south. Many pools sit under firs, maples, or slopes where runoff, shade, and organic debris all play a part. A surface may look stained from leaves, but after I run my hand across the wall, I often find the plaster has lost enough cream coat to feel like medium sandpaper.
That texture matters here. I have looked at pools where the shallow end still seemed decent, while the deep end had etched walls that grabbed dirt within 24 hours of cleaning. In one backyard last spring, the owner thought the pool needed better chemicals, but the real issue was that the old plaster had worn past the point where water balance alone could save it.
I pay close attention to steps, benches, sun shelves, and the area below the tile line. Those spots tell me more than a quick look across the water because feet, brushes, automatic cleaners, and winter water levels leave clear marks. If the top 6 inches below the tile are chalky and the steps have gray patches showing through, I start talking seriously about resurfacing instead of another cosmetic patch.
What I Look For Before I Recommend New Plaster
I never like giving a resurfacing recommendation from a photo alone. I want to see the shell, the return fittings, the light niche, the tile line, and any old repair spots before I tell someone what they are facing. For homeowners comparing local options, I have seen people use Pool Resurfacing and Plastering West Linn Oregon as a service reference while they sort out what kind of plaster work their pool may need. I still tell them the same thing in person: the surface has to be judged by touch, history, and how it reacts after cleaning.
I usually start with three questions before I even get my tools out. I ask how old the surface is, whether the pool has ever been acid washed, and how often the water has gone out of balance. A 9-year-old plaster job with careful chemistry can look better than a 5-year-old surface that went through repeated low pH cycles.
I also look for hollow spots. I tap around steps, corners, and patched areas because delamination can hide under a surface that looks acceptable from above. If I hear that dull, empty sound in several places, I know a simple skim or aggressive sanding will not solve the problem for long.
Choosing A Surface That Fits A Real Backyard
I talk with homeowners about how they actually use the pool, not just what color they like on a sample board. A family with 3 kids, a dog that watches from the deck, and heavy weekend use needs a different conversation than someone who swims quietly after work. Plain white plaster can still be a clean choice, but I explain its limits with staining and visible mottling.
Quartz finishes come up often because they give a bit more texture and color depth without feeling too harsh underfoot. I have installed surfaces where the homeowner wanted a bright blue look, then changed direction after seeing how much shade the pool carried after 3 p.m. Shade can make a finish appear darker than expected, especially in a yard with tall trees and darker fencing.
Aggregate finishes can be durable, but I do not push them on every pool. Some swimmers dislike the feel, and some older shells need extra prep before I would be comfortable with that kind of finish. I would rather disappoint someone during the selection stage than have them call me 6 months later saying the surface is rougher than they expected.
What The Work Week Usually Feels Like
Most resurfacing jobs I handle follow a familiar rhythm, though every pool has one or two surprises. Draining, chipping, surface prep, fittings, plaster, filling, and startup all have to happen in the right order. I check it twice.
Weather is a real factor in this part of Oregon. I have had jobs where a dry forecast shifted overnight, and I had to adjust crew timing because fresh plaster and heavy rain do not make a friendly pair. On a normal residential pool, the loudest and messiest part is usually the prep, and I warn people before the first compressor starts.
The fill is not the finish line. I tell homeowners that the first 28 days decide a lot about how the surface ages, especially with brushing and water balance. I have seen beautiful plaster jobs develop early scale because someone treated startup like ordinary weekly maintenance.
Small Mistakes That Cost More Later
The mistake I see most is waiting until the pool becomes uncomfortable to use. By that point, the rough surface has often been collecting algae in tiny pockets for more than one season. A homeowner may spend hundreds of dollars on chemicals and still feel like the pool never really looks clean.
Another mistake is assuming every stain can be removed. Some stains sit in the surface, while others are tied to metal, organic debris, or old chemistry problems. I can test a small area, but I do not promise a full visual reset if the plaster itself has thinned or become porous.
I also try to slow people down when they want to resurface without fixing the surrounding issues. Bad drainage behind a raised wall, broken mastic at the coping, or loose tile can shorten the life of the new surface. If I see 2 or 3 of those problems together, I bring them up before the pool is drained.
I like pool resurfacing best when it is treated as a reset rather than a cover-up. In West Linn, that means looking at shade, trees, drainage, water history, and the way the family really uses the pool. If I were walking a backyard tomorrow morning, I would start with my hand on the plaster, my eyes on the tile line, and my questions aimed at how the surface got to its current condition.
