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Rentable, Blow-Upable Hot Tubs

“We were sitting around a campfire in 2005,” recalled Michael Hawkins, owner of San Diego Hot Tub Rentals (858-578-8822, sandiegohottubrentals.com), “and we saw an inflatable hot tub in a Popular Science magazine. We thought, That would be great to have when we got back from going out downtown. And then we thought, I bet someone would want to rent it from us.”

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He was right. Today, Hawkins said, “We do vacation rentals along the boardwalk, we’ve been down on the beach, and we’ve been on rooftop decks. And I have a portable battery pack, so we can set up a hot-tub party trailer. It’s about 20 feet long, and a little more than a third of it is an elevated floor for the hot tub. You can have people standing on the back by the barbecue and the Kegerator, and there’s a bar rail along the whole thing.... Once, we did a Super Bowl hot-tub party at the Leo Carrillo campground in Malibu. We had DirecTV’s NFL Sunday Ticket set up with a flat-screen right there at the campsite.”

By the time he made it to Malibu, Hawkins had found a better product than his original inflatable model. “Now, we use Softub hot tubs. They’re made from high-density foam and covered in marine-grade vinyl. Some of the blow-up or assembled hot tubs will only have champagne-style bubbles coming up; they won’t have jets like you’d find in a Jacuzzi. But the Softub has those Jacuzzi-style jets.... All you need is the outlet, a water source, and a level surface.”

Hawkins ran down the rest of the specs. “The ones we rent are the largest model: room for six people, 300-gallon capacity. But because they’re only 75 pounds, you can flip them on their sides and roll them through a standard doorway. We bring a continuous hot-water heater that runs on propane; if the heat drops a couple of degrees while you’re using it, the heater will turn on and keep the temperature maintained. For safety, there’s a locking lid. We use a very small dose of granulated chlorine — usually about three days’ worth. And there’s a device inside the motor pack that pushes out ozone, and that acts as a sanitizer to kill a lot of the bacteria. That way, you use less chemicals. Unless there’s heavy use with a lot of tanning lotion or things like that, it usually stays pretty clean for a weekend. But we teach you how to use it and give you enough chemicals for whatever rental period you need.” A rental costs $349 for a Friday-to-Monday weekend; $299 daily for midweek. The party trailer is $499 daily. Summer and Christmas are the busiest times of year; call to reserve.

“We come and drain it,” continued Hawkins. “We try to reclaim as much [water] as possible. As long as you don’t put additional chemicals in, the water becomes neutral within 24 hours, and so it’s safe for plants or lawns. I actually partnered with a mobile car detailer; he sometimes uses it for rinse-water.” He has also partnered with massage therapists to provide day-long retreats. “We’ll come in with tables. Five one-hour massages plus a hot-tub rental would be $750.”

Like Hawkins, Ed Vasquez at Hollywood Hot Rub Rentals (619-312-2592, hollywoodhottubrentals.com) also has a varied client list. “I never ask what people are doing. I had an auto mechanic put one in his shop. And I’ve done three or four baptismal setups at churches. I’ve never had a bad customer, though the college guys at San Diego State are hard on them. We have a pretty extensive contract; the renter has complete liability for everything from uninvited guests to uninvited pets.”

Also like Hawkins, Vasquez rents Softubs, but he carries the two- and four-person hot tubs as well as the six-person. “The two- and six-person tubs are the most popular. The six-person comes with a little bench seat and a spa light. But you don’t really need the bench; when you sit in them, you’re kind of buoyant. You’re just floating.”

Vasquez found that “most people rent them for only a day or two, so they’re fine without doing much in the way of maintenance. But I do have people down by the beach who will keep it for a week or two, and then I have to clean it once or twice a week. I’ll pump out the water, hose it down, wipe it with chlorine, and then fill it back up.”

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Keep Palm and Carry On?

“We were sitting around a campfire in 2005,” recalled Michael Hawkins, owner of San Diego Hot Tub Rentals (858-578-8822, sandiegohottubrentals.com), “and we saw an inflatable hot tub in a Popular Science magazine. We thought, That would be great to have when we got back from going out downtown. And then we thought, I bet someone would want to rent it from us.”

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He was right. Today, Hawkins said, “We do vacation rentals along the boardwalk, we’ve been down on the beach, and we’ve been on rooftop decks. And I have a portable battery pack, so we can set up a hot-tub party trailer. It’s about 20 feet long, and a little more than a third of it is an elevated floor for the hot tub. You can have people standing on the back by the barbecue and the Kegerator, and there’s a bar rail along the whole thing.... Once, we did a Super Bowl hot-tub party at the Leo Carrillo campground in Malibu. We had DirecTV’s NFL Sunday Ticket set up with a flat-screen right there at the campsite.”

By the time he made it to Malibu, Hawkins had found a better product than his original inflatable model. “Now, we use Softub hot tubs. They’re made from high-density foam and covered in marine-grade vinyl. Some of the blow-up or assembled hot tubs will only have champagne-style bubbles coming up; they won’t have jets like you’d find in a Jacuzzi. But the Softub has those Jacuzzi-style jets.... All you need is the outlet, a water source, and a level surface.”

Hawkins ran down the rest of the specs. “The ones we rent are the largest model: room for six people, 300-gallon capacity. But because they’re only 75 pounds, you can flip them on their sides and roll them through a standard doorway. We bring a continuous hot-water heater that runs on propane; if the heat drops a couple of degrees while you’re using it, the heater will turn on and keep the temperature maintained. For safety, there’s a locking lid. We use a very small dose of granulated chlorine — usually about three days’ worth. And there’s a device inside the motor pack that pushes out ozone, and that acts as a sanitizer to kill a lot of the bacteria. That way, you use less chemicals. Unless there’s heavy use with a lot of tanning lotion or things like that, it usually stays pretty clean for a weekend. But we teach you how to use it and give you enough chemicals for whatever rental period you need.” A rental costs $349 for a Friday-to-Monday weekend; $299 daily for midweek. The party trailer is $499 daily. Summer and Christmas are the busiest times of year; call to reserve.

“We come and drain it,” continued Hawkins. “We try to reclaim as much [water] as possible. As long as you don’t put additional chemicals in, the water becomes neutral within 24 hours, and so it’s safe for plants or lawns. I actually partnered with a mobile car detailer; he sometimes uses it for rinse-water.” He has also partnered with massage therapists to provide day-long retreats. “We’ll come in with tables. Five one-hour massages plus a hot-tub rental would be $750.”

Like Hawkins, Ed Vasquez at Hollywood Hot Rub Rentals (619-312-2592, hollywoodhottubrentals.com) also has a varied client list. “I never ask what people are doing. I had an auto mechanic put one in his shop. And I’ve done three or four baptismal setups at churches. I’ve never had a bad customer, though the college guys at San Diego State are hard on them. We have a pretty extensive contract; the renter has complete liability for everything from uninvited guests to uninvited pets.”

Also like Hawkins, Vasquez rents Softubs, but he carries the two- and four-person hot tubs as well as the six-person. “The two- and six-person tubs are the most popular. The six-person comes with a little bench seat and a spa light. But you don’t really need the bench; when you sit in them, you’re kind of buoyant. You’re just floating.”

Vasquez found that “most people rent them for only a day or two, so they’re fine without doing much in the way of maintenance. But I do have people down by the beach who will keep it for a week or two, and then I have to clean it once or twice a week. I’ll pump out the water, hose it down, wipe it with chlorine, and then fill it back up.”

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