Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#91
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 15 Aug 2004 02:58:09 +0100, Derek * wrote:
But then is *spitefully* expensive. Say 20-25% more expensive than ASDA. That's an understatement. One has opened locally replacing a Safeway, there is no way I'd do a weekly shop there. Their prices are wholly unacceptable. which in turn is dearer than Lidl (we have both in our street, so I go to Lidl unless I want stuff which Lidl doesn't sell, like cut flowers, in which case I go to Tesco. Lidl is nearer and its coleslaw & potato salad are much nicer!). Probably due to their German origin, there was a time for 15 years after the war, when the Germans could not afford to eat fresh meat so sausages and salads became the order of the day, as the years went by this morphed into high quality sausages and salads. Lidl's salads, cooked meats and cheeses are a revelation in terms of taste and quality. greg -- Es ist mein Teil - nein Mein Teil - nein Denn das ist mein Teil - nein Mein Teil - nein |
#92
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 14 Aug 2004 at 10:47:37, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 18:25:23 on Fri, 13 Aug 2004, Brimstone remarked: My mother walked to and from the shops, about a mile each way, bringing the goods home in a shopping trolley. Why are so many people wimps these days? Probably for the same reason they have central heating and don't spend several hours a day setting and raking out coal fires, or have an inside loo rather than a bucket in an outhouse. Standards have changed. You'll also find that supermarkets dislike you removing their trolleys these days - they have deposit schemes, and clever wheels that lock up as you try to leave the premises. Er - Brimstone didn't say a supermarket trolley, he said a shopping trolley. Which is different. -- Annabel - "Mrs Redboots" (trying out a new .sig to reflect the personality I use in online forums) |
#93
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roland Perry wrote to uk.transport.london on Sat, 14 Aug 2004:
In message , at 11:24:09 on Sat, 14 Aug 2004, Brimstone remarked: "I've got three siblings and when we were kids we usually had at least one dog. My mother walked to and from the shops, about a mile each way, bringing the goods home in a shopping trolley. Why are so many people wimps these days?" Where does it say "supermarket" in that quote? What other kinds of shopping trolley are there? Well, shopping trolleys! The kind that are like a large shopping-bag on wheels. -- Annabel - "Mrs Redboots" (trying out a new .sig to reflect the personality I use in online forums) |
#94
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mark Gibson wrote to uk.transport.london on Sun, 15 Aug 2004:
I figure if they charge me $1.00 to "lease" a shopping cart, I might as well keep it. The local Walmart doen't seem to care much when I roll a shopping cart to where I live across the street. They just send a cart person to pick them up every so often. Don't you get your coin back when you return the trolley, as we do? I'd far rather have a coin-operated trolley than a wheel-lock one, as you can sometimes take them home, empty them, and then take them back (or bribe a passing child with the coin). -- Annabel - "Mrs Redboots" (trying out a new .sig to reflect the personality I use in online forums) |
#95
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Annabel Smyth wrote:
Mark Gibson wrote to uk.transport.london on Sun, 15 Aug 2004: I figure if they charge me $1.00 to "lease" a shopping cart, I might as well keep it. The local Walmart doen't seem to care much when I roll a shopping cart to where I live across the street. They just send a cart person to pick them up every so often. Don't you get your coin back when you return the trolley, as we do? I'd far rather have a coin-operated trolley than a wheel-lock one, as you can sometimes take them home, empty them, and then take them back (or bribe a passing child with the coin). At Sainsburys on Cromwell Road, both schemes are in operation (coin-operated and wheel-lock). So if you try to take a trolley away with you, it locks and you can't wheel it back to get the money back! However, students are resourceful; when desperate a few of them will just lift the trolley high enough over the locking area so that it doesn't lock, et voila. I think some years ago Sainsburys used to employ students to go round the local area recovering trolleys that other students had nicked! -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#96
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave Arquati wrote:
I think some years ago Sainsburys used to employ students to go round the local area recovering trolleys that other students had nicked! Sounds like an enterprisding job creation scheme, even if not totally legal. ![]() |
#97
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Brimstone" wrote in message ... Dave Arquati wrote: I think some years ago Sainsburys used to employ students to go round the local area recovering trolleys that other students had nicked! Sounds like an enterprisding job creation scheme, even if not totally legal. ![]() Shopping carts cost something like $70 from what I have seen in the paper. Stealing shopping carts of course means higher prices have to paid by other people. |
#98
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jack May" wrote in message
news:QRMTc.315199$XM6.185579@attbi_s53... "Brimstone" wrote in message ... Dave Arquati wrote: I think some years ago Sainsburys used to employ students to go round the local area recovering trolleys that other students had nicked! Sounds like an enterprisding job creation scheme, even if not totally legal. ![]() Shopping carts cost something like $70 from what I have seen in the paper. Stealing shopping carts of course means higher prices have to paid by other people. And returning them saves everyone money -- Everything above is the personal opinion of the author, and nothing to do with where he works and all that lovely disclaimery stuff. Posted in his lunch hour too. |
#99
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jack May wrote:
"Brimstone" wrote in message ... Dave Arquati wrote: I think some years ago Sainsburys used to employ students to go round the local area recovering trolleys that other students had nicked! Sounds like an enterprisding job creation scheme, even if not totally legal. ![]() Shopping carts cost something like $70 from what I have seen in the paper. Stealing shopping carts of course means higher prices have to paid by other people. Quite so, which is why my comments were phrased in an ironic style. |
#100
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Neil Williams" wrote in message
... On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 09:44:52 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: So instead of getting the whatever that you carefully picked out in the shop, at home and useful that afternoon; you get to take a day off work, and wait in all of next Thursday, in the hope that the one they deliver from the warehouse doesn't have a big scratch on the side. Indeed. While I am very much part of the target demographic for things like supermarket delivery, I just can't guarantee to be in at any given point to receive delivery of an item, and I wouldn't want such things delivering to work. Somerfield specify their delivery down to a 2-hour slot. I normally get my shopping done at a time when I expect to be at home anyway for 2 hours on the same or following day. -- Cheers, Euan Gawnsoft: http://www.gawnsoft.co.sr Symbian/Epoc wiki: http://html.dnsalias.net:1122 Smalltalk links (harvested from comp.lang.smalltalk) http://html.dnsalias.net/gawnsoft/smalltalk |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Camden Town revisited - many times, many,many times | London Transport | |||
Stone Mastic Asphalt and Thin Surfacings oin General | London Transport | |||
Many Birds with One Stone | London Transport | |||
How many stations in London? | London Transport | |||
Driver in Trouble over Stone Throwers | London Transport |