Get your swimming pool prepared before the summer arrives. A cold winter can create cracks in the concrete of an inground pool, eventually creating a leak which can be patched by a professional swimming pool repair contractor in Mississippi. Are you looking on having an inground or above ground swimming pool installed? Is your above ground swimming pool in desperate need of a cleaning? There are several competitive swimming pool cleaning services available in Mississippi, all you have to do is find one.
Are there any additional pool services or supplies you would require? Swimming pool maintenance can include repair of heaters, pumps, pool covers, and filters. Professional Mississippi contractors can help install solar, gas and electric swimming pool heaters from brands such as Teledyne Laars, Raypak, Hayward, and Pentair pool heaters. Mississippi contractors can help repair or install a solar, automatic, mesh pool safety cover, winter, retractable, electric pool cover, and all other types of swimming pool covers. Want to protect your pool and privacy by building a swimming pool enclosure? Fences, screens and roof structures are a popular, and affordable way to keep your swimming pool open all year round. Mississippi contractors can also help you in installing a hot tub or jacuzzi. Hot tub maintenance is essential in avoiding expensive repairs to pumps, heaters and damage to wiring.
About Mississippi:
First explored for Spain by Hernando De Soto, who discovered the Mississippi River in 1540, the region was later claimed by France. In 1699, a French group under Sieur d'Iberville established the first permanent settlement near present-day Ocean Springs. Great Britain took over the area in 1763 after the French and Indian Wars, ceding it to the U.S. in 1783 after the Revolution. Spain did not relinquish its claims until 1798, and in 1810 the U.S. annexed West Florida from Spain, including what is now southern Mississippi.
For a little more than one hundred years, from shortly after the state's founding through the Great Depression, cotton was the undisputed king of Mississippi's largely agrarian economy. Over the last half-century, however, Mississippi has diversified its economy by balancing agricultural output with increased industrial activity. Today, agriculture continues as a major segment of the state's economy. For almost four decades soybeans occupied the most acreage, while cotton remained the largest cash crop. In 2001, however, more acres of cotton were planted than soybeans, and Mississippi jumped to second in the nation in cotton production (exceeded only by Texas). The state's farmlands also yield important harvests of corn, peanuts, pecans, rice, sugar cane, and sweet potatoes as well as poultry, eggs, meat animals, dairy products, feed crops, and horticultural crops. Mississippi remains the world's leading producer of pond-raised catfish.