In our area there's a grocery store named Aldi. When it comes to shopping cart management, Aldi has the best idea of ANY grocery store out there. In order to get a cart shoppers have to insert a quarter to unlock the cart and when you return the cart you get a quarter back. As a result, there are virtually zero carts left in the parking lot and all the carts roll true and still have their factory alignment. No need to hire anyone to fetch the carts out of the lot either.
I don't know why all grocery stores don't use this method.
Here's a biggie!
Smokers stink!
Sometimes they're just a lil stinky but in the winter months when they smoke inside of their cars with the windows up. Holy ****!
I was in the store the other day waiting my turn in the checkout line. A woman got in line behind me and I got a whiff of her stale cigarette stank. I swear, I almost gagged, I was thisclose. I had to change lines before I lost my lunch.
Here's a biggie!
Smokers stink!
Sometimes they're just a lil stinky but in the winter months when they smoke inside of their cars with the windows up. Holy ****!
I was in the store the other day waiting my turn in the checkout line. A woman got in line behind me and I got a whiff of her stale cigarette stank. I swear, I almost gagged, I was thisclose. I had to change lines before I lost my lunch.
That's pretty much the norm at most UK & indeed EUropean (which is where Aldi comes from) supermarkets/places that supply trollies.
The normal rate over here is £1 or €1 although you can buy tokens that clip on your key ring to use in them instead.
OFFTOPIC: something that struck me as interesting was while in Europe, one collects coins in normal life but compared to the US, there can be a substantial amount of money in a handful of Euro coins. They have 2 Euro and (I think) 3 Euro coins, and I would end up with a considerable sum of money rattling in my pocket. Not at all like the US, where our largest common coin is only $0.25 and most are smaller yet so a fistful of US coins is not very much in value (though high in annoyance, especially wearing riding gear). I do not know how large your coins are but even one pound is far larger than any of our (common) coins.
Brian
What no threepenny bit and halfpence?
It has not been all that long that I have been able to smell cigarette smoke, either the smoke itself or residue as you mention having smelled in the store, as I used to smoke myself. Oddly enough, now that I can smell it, it really does not bother me and other people can actually smoke in my house if they want to. We even provide ash trays. :-)
But I can also smell it on other people once is a while and it is like a bolt of lightening; I grew up in a home with smokers and smoked myself and so never smelled that scent for decades. Now when I do my first reaction is surprise. And it really is not all that bad even now though I would agree that it is not quite pleasant.
Brian
You quit smoking cigs but still allow smoking in your house? I'm guessing that your wife still smokes? My wife smoked when we were first married but she quit about 25 years ago and she complains more than I do about the stale cigarette stank that some people have. I never smoked but even when my wife did smoke she wouldn't do it in the house or the car.
No, actually Andrea quit about a year before I did. There are no longer any smokers that live here. And yes, I allow and actually offer to have people smoke in my house.... anywhere in my house actually.
I realize I am the odd- man out but cigarette smoke / smoking does not bother me, or at least not very much. And I very well remember how tough it was when I was a smoker, and a pretty hard- core smoker at that, to have all the restricted places. So I let people smoke in my house. Almost no one does it anyway but if someone is here who smokes (because I see the cigarettes, smell it on them, etc. and know they smoke) I offer up an ashtray. The vast majority of people do NOT take me up on it but a couple do.
I only posted this to illustrate the huge range in human behavior and in contrast to your views on smokers. Not throwing rocks or criticizing you in any way, or anyone who does not like smokers / smoking, just saying that it is a non- issue for me (and my wife, apparently). Just that I find it a little bit amusing that we can be so polarized in opposite ways on the same subject. It happens all the time, and I am sure if we talked for a while we could find another subject where our positions were reversed but still it is a little amusing that this happens between what appears to be pretty normal, rational people (well, it seems you are Conrad- I have a pet desiccated squirrel and I find some of his opinions WAY out there).
Brian
No, actually Andrea quit about a year before I did. There are no longer any smokers that live here. And yes, I allow and actually offer to have people smoke in my house.... anywhere in my house actually.
...
That is crazy loco. "Please, come in, and bring me some 2nd had smoke with an increased risk of causing me cancer, and hard-to-remove stank thereby devaluing my home. Welcome!"
I do agree though, to each their own . Still
No, no- we do not allow 'crazy loco' to be smoked here, just tobacco.
Maybe we are just not that sensitive to cigarette smoke. And I actually find something like cherry pipe tobacco smoke to be quite pleasant (does anyone smoke a pipe anymore?) Besides, I have known more than a few people who can make scents far, far worse than any cigarette..... and they do not get thrown out of the house for that. At least not so far....
You tobacco agitated folks should be pretty riled up about 3rd hand smoke, right? Oh yes, some tobacco opponents claim it may be very, very bad indeed. <shrugs shoulders>
Brian
Maybe we are just not that sensitive to cigarette smoke. And I actually find something like cherry pipe tobacco smoke to be quite pleasant (does anyone smoke a pipe anymore?)
puffy baby man
Hard to change parties when you have nowhere to go.
Hard to change parties when you have nowhere to go.