I would assume that girl was smart enough not to put fish in chlorinated water since she knows piranha behavior. And if the pool got as dirty as it was in page 1, I'm sure all the chlorine was gone, which is why she put the fish in there.Well, that Biology Club member failed some basic fish care. Chlorine, which pools are full of, is absolutely fatal to fish, essentially chokes 'em to death.
sir, this is Wendy'sI would assume that girl was smart enough not to put fish in chlorinated water since she knows piranha behavior. And if the pool got as dirty as it was in page 1, I'm sure all the chlorine was gone, which is why she put the fish in there.
The bigger question is, how did a school pool reach the point of sludge while having a major chlorine loss problem?
Also, where even is pool maintenance staff? Is it just the club cleaning up all the time? In all the pool cleaning chapters, they never once chlorinated the water as far as I remember.
It's in the middle of a forest, on top of a hill. Depending on the size of the forest and the prefecture the school is located in, I'd say a bear sighting is not that improbable.Piranhas at school premises? I was about to comment how absurd that was, but then I remembered that A BEAR attacked them previously. This school is lawsuit incarnate.
To add, at this point Nonoka’s “chemicals” are (ironically) among the most mysterious things in the series.Speaking as a pool owner, I would NOT immediately dive in right after that strong of a chemical was added.
To my knowledge (which may be wrong or out-dated,) Japanese schools tend to have students do a lot, if not all, the cleaning, in efforts to teach them responsibility and the like. Professional staff would only get called in for things that require professional work.Also, where even is pool maintenance staff? Is it just the club cleaning up all the time? In all the pool cleaning chapters, they never once chlorinated the water as far as I remember.