We avoid communal dining if at all possible.
It's not my job to entertain idiot extroverts, and I have no difficulty saying that directly to them if they don't get the hint.
We avoid communal dining if at all possible.
It's not my job to entertain idiot extroverts, and I have no difficulty saying that directly to them if they don't get the hint.
In March we ate at Biergarten and were seated with a very odd couple-in their 50s and recently married in Klingon ceremony
The guy hardly said a word but the lady talked non stop saying some pretty bizarre things
When they left she announced that they were going home to( insert naughty word for adult activities)![]()
Thank you!! It is ridiculous using abbreviations instead of the names of the places- like we are all expected to know what they stand for!!
We avoid communal dining if at all possible.
It's not my job to entertain idiot extroverts, and I have no difficulty saying that directly to them if they don't get the hint.
Consistency is key. I'll give you that.We avoid communal dining if at all possible.
It's not my job to entertain idiot extroverts, and I have no difficulty saying that directly to them if they don't get the hint.
Good for you, and I love your response! I’m going to use next time I’m subjected to that kind of remark.We ate at Biergarten several years ago...luckily my wife and our daughter were getting food and I was with a family from N. Carolina. I was chatting with the dad over a beer when he proceed with the following:
"there are a lot more black people here than in Germany". I sat with a befuddled look, and he followed with "a lot more Jews too". Now, we are Jewish, so I broke out into laughter and replied "did you actually say that outloud"? He got embarrassed and quiet. I continued laughing for quite a while.
He was lucky, had my wife been there, he would have been wearing his beer and dinner
Just wanted to say we recently visited Bath for the first time. What a beautiful town. We enjoyed our visit very much.MaybHere in Bath lots of places have giant tables
Just wanted to say we recently visited Bath for the first time. What a beautiful town. We enjoyed our visit very much.
At Biergarten, we were sat with people who didn't acknowledge our presence, but they finished before us. It wasn't terrible, but I was kind of wondering if we ruined their meal or offended them and it was awkward. It was 3 people in their 20s or early 30s having to be sat next to me, DH, a 9 year old and twin 2 year olds. I think Biergarten messed up on that one....a young family with a group of adults seems like the wrong choice.
I've never been to Biergarten but at Big Thunder Ranch BBQ in DLR we (2 adults, 2 young children) were seated at a large picnic table with two 20-something couples. They weren't interested in us but that was perfectly fine. It seemed to me they were just seating people wherever there was space available, not trying curate appropriate groupings. I wouldn't really have expected anything else.We had something similar at Biergarten. It was me, DH, our 3yo, 4yo and 7yo. They sat us with a couple in their 60s or 70s. They didn't even acknowledge us. It was so awkward.
Oh my! You must see it all. Yes, it was quite crowded when we were there a few weeks ago, but we still loved every minute of our visit. took the train from London for the day.It is peak tourist season at the moment, hopefully you came when it was a bit quieter. We actually found an American tourist in our garden a few weeks ago! We live in the town centre and he saw our gate open, was the bench and assumed it was a public seating area!
We go to WDW in the summer for smaller crowds![]()
I really hate communal tables! When I go to a restaurant it is time as someone said to decompress or even discuss things that might be stressing me at home or at my job. I cannot do this when there are strangers around plus if I want to put my elbows on the table then I do not want to be judged.
That being said we have gone to a couple of events where we were forced to sit with strangers and it was actually a good experience partially because we were at historic venues and the others at the table had the same interests as us. The key was we knew in advance and did not view it as a night out or an experience that we just wanted to share as a couple.
It annoys me to no end when someone comes to my table and plunks them selves down just because there are two extra seats! Last year Casey's Corner was busy and I was sitting at the table waiting for my husband to come back, my son and his gf got up to use the rest room. Bottom line this woman tried to put her kids at my table! She got mad when I said the seats were taken. Why is it not okay to want privacy? Maybe I do not want to sit and entertain a couple of strange kids when I am on vacation. I think communal tables are okay when that is the policy of the venue but I do not think it is okay when it is not the norm and people force it and then get indignant when one does not want to comply. I just need to add that my husband says I can talk to a wall and rarely leave a store etc without having a conversation with a customer or staff so it is not that I am anti-social I just do not like being forced!
I'm not a fan of communal dining in the first place, I need to recharge my social batteries by not having to be "on" every once in a while. But honestly I'll probably actively avoid them in the future. At Biergarten we were seated next to a couple having a night away from their kids. They (well, the wife at least) were already intoxicated when they arrived. Then the server cut them off. Cue the foul language, yelling, trash talking etc for the whole meal. Right next to my 2 year old. Server wouldn't do anything about it - I've decided it's not worth the risk in the future.