saw the opposite in my street last night when I went out to the car for something. 7 adults taking 2 kids, maybe aged about 6, out guising
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There was a kid - a really young kid, maybe about 3 or 4 - who came out with some rhyme about stabbing teddy bears. I thought it was a bit dark for a kid that age. For the second year running, I ran out of sweets very quickly.
How many sweets to folk normally buy? I guess it might be because we are in a relatively new build estate with lots of families compared to my last place where at most I’d get 3 groups or guisers.
Items in supermarkets with a use by / best before date of the same day and it hasn’t been reduced.
Packets of eg potatoes or other fresh produce that no longer has any best before type of date on it.
How do I know which pack to buy first ? Short of opening a pack to check?
A well meaning policy in theory.
Will likely be a staffing issue. I've worked in supermarkets where regular customers knew roughly what time I would start reducing items and crowd me while I was pricing down the items. They're no shy either, quite common to be told what they wanted the reduced price to be.
My local Asda is like a feeding frenzy when the final round of reductions get done every evening.
I just don't know what people do with half the stuff. Bakery items I get, you can freeze them. Same with cold meat or even soft fruits. But someone buying 15 yoghurts at 10p that go out of date the same day? I'd be genuinely curious at to whether they actually sit and eat as many as they can before midnight. I'm not particularly bothered by best before dates and the like but I'd draw the line at 3 day old dairy.
I've seen bulk buying of yoghurts, pre packed sandwiches for local community clubs and the like. From what I used to see a number of shoppers don't pay too much attention to bb dates, tends to be poultry and sea food they are a bit more cautious about.
If packaging is blown, don't buy - applies to cooked and uncooked meat including ready meals. That's my pet peeve, staff who still put that out for sale, probs because they haven't been trained to look for it. It can be a sign of bacteria growing.
I think the quickest snapped up is meat, which will be chucked in the freezer. Some of the vegetables on reduction are in a sorry state, but better than being wasted.
My pet peeve would be crap reductions. Lidl aldi just have a set 30 or 50% sticker, Sainsbury’s and m and s usually a decent reduction. The coop next to me though has reductions like £3.99 down to £3.50. If I'm buying something getting chucked that night, I'm wanting a third of or I'll just buy with a decent date
M&S was a goldmine for reductions during the early part of the 1st lockdown. I think with the clothing section being closed people just forgot about the food unless it was a standalone. I was getting stuff in the Fort Kinnaird shop for £1 reduced from£5.50 and the like and you had quite literally the pick of the store.
It changed after a few weeks so I think word must have got out on social media.
People that can't speak basic English, watching Pointless and this woman gave Bruvvas in Amms as the answer, even forgiving there may be a wee accent but how hard is it to say Brothers in Arms.
When you spend an afternoon investigating something complicated and summarising it as clearly and concisely as you can, and then someone responds with 18 paragraphs demonstrating that they didn't read what you wrote.
Hypothetically, I mean.
When Gregg Wallace says “flesh” instead of “meat” on Master Chef.
You get a new football scores app installed and reduce the "notifications" to Scottish prem and English prem goals only, nothing else.
Then early doors, I get a tinkling text "Ronaldo teammates feel disrespect". Why am I so annoyed?
The “care” reaction being right next to the “haha” reaction on Facebook. Accidentally selected “haha” to someone’s post about a serious health condition. I noticed and changed it but if I hadn’t, they’d be thinking I’m a heartless sod.
Facebook, its the absolute pits
People who say "Pacific" when they mean "Specific".
People who think it’s funny to phone up and order food for collection and say they want to pay cash on collection and then don’t turn up. Fannies, just wasting their and our time thinking they have got one over on us and we’ve actually cooked the food waiting for them. Happened a few times over the last few weeks, tonight it was a £75 order, of course we never cooked anything as we’ll never take the risk unless ee know it’s 100% genuine.
Dog owners leaving the dog poo behind - particularly the one who left the wee pile that's on my lawn. :rolleyes: