Chad explained the pros and cons of the pressure vac that I had versus a suction vac.
Honest, dependable, owner on the route since 2012. Wild Coyote keeps East Valley pools clear so the families who own them never have to think twice about jumping in.
Wild Coyote Pool Service is a family-owned operation based at the foot of the San Tan Mountains in Queen Creek. We opened the East Valley route in 2012 and we still answer the same phone we started with. The work hasn't changed since the first week: brushing, skimming, basket clearing, filter backwash, chemical analysis, timer adjustment — done every week, the same way, by people who live in the same neighborhoods as the pools they service.
Honesty, dependability, and knowledge of our trade.
Chad is the owner. He's on the route. When a customer asks why their pool is fighting algae in October or whether their pressure-side vac is doing what a suction-side vac would do better, he's the one who'll walk them through it — in plain English, with the pros and cons of each, before quoting any work. That's the part of running a pool route that doesn't show up on a service ticket but is the whole reason people stay with us through summer, monsoon season, and the long quiet winters.
The route covers five East Valley cities — Queen Creek, San Tan Valley, Mesa, Chandler, and Gilbert. The trucks are stocked for the full weekly stack plus the bigger jobs that come up over a pool's life: cartridge, D.E., and sand filter cleans, pump and motor replacements, in-floor cleaning system service, salt-water cell care, glass-bead blasting, acid wash and chlorine bath, tile and calcium removal, and the once-every-decade drain-and-cleanout when a pool finally needs a reset.
What we don't do is pad invoices or quote work the pool doesn't need. Our prices are published on the pricing page — cartridge filter clean from $100, D.E. filter clean from $100, sand from $300, drain at $150, acid wash or chlorine bath from $150. The number you see online is the number on the work order is the number on the invoice.
Most pool-service quotes come over the phone, in a tone that depends on how the call is going. Ours don't. Filter cleans, drains, acid washes, chlorine baths — the prices are on the pricing page, where anyone shopping a route can compare them against the company that called them back yesterday.
The same goes for the work. When Chad's at a pool and the customer asks a technical question, the answer is the one he'd give his own family — even when the honest answer is "the equipment you have is fine, you don't need the upgrade." That's the kind of conversation that earns a fifteen-year customer, and it's the only kind we know how to have.
— The Wild Coyote way · Since 2012Chad explained the pros and cons of the pressure vac that I had versus a suction vac.
Tell us where the pool is and what's going on with it. Chad or someone on the route will get back the same week with a flat-rate quote — or just a friendly read on what the pool actually needs.