And it is over the top sanctimonious and ludicrous to equate an occassional leaving of a cart out of a corral as laziness.
I just call them like I see them.

And it is over the top sanctimonious and ludicrous to equate an occassional leaving of a cart out of a corral as laziness.
Why do people feel that the way their stores in their neighborhood/state/region are the way all stores operate?
Oh, and the idea that full service automatically equals higher prices? Bunk.
Let me throw another wrinkle into all of this. Many argue that the main reason one must return a cart is to prevent car damage. What if the store has an indoor garage, as many Chicago stores do. Mr. Bipp leaves his cart on the "x" in the indoor garage; the cart isn't obstructing any parking space, and there are no worries that the cart will roll away and hurt someone or something. Does it still twist the knickers to see that cart parked on the x?
Why do people feel that the way their stores in their neighborhood/state/region are the way all stores operate?
Oh, and the idea that full service automatically equals higher prices? Bunk.
Let me throw another wrinkle into all of this. Many argue that the main reason one must return a cart is to prevent car damage. What if the store has an indoor garage, as many Chicago stores do. Mr. Bipp leaves his cart on the "x" in the indoor garage; the cart isn't obstructing any parking space, and there are no worries that the cart will roll away and hurt someone or something. Does it still twist the knickers to see that cart parked on the x?
Well, I ALWAYS take my shopping cart back to the corral.
Mind, here in Texas our grocery store parking lots may cover several square miles. It is not unusual to have to push your cart for 20 to 30 minutes simply to reach your car, then another 10 minutes, if you are lucky, to the nearest corral.
Indeed, the other day I parked so far from the store's entrance that I had to call a taxi. When I left the store the only way I was able to get back to my car was to join up with a Cart Train that was passing by; you simply 'hook up' (like a Conga line) your cart to the passing line and then detach yourself when you get within spitting distance of your car.
Anyway, regardless, not only do I always return the cart to the corral, but I always pull out a new linen cloth and some metal cleaner and clean my cart thoroughly, until it shines (the shine is after the waxing part is over). While doing so I can't help but glare at those inconsiderate Yankees who just push their cart into the corral and leave it, without even giving it a low-grade 'spit shine'.
No doubt others on this thread care for their shopping carts as deeply as I do.
And I say you have NOT returned your cart each and every time because no one does something always and never. I never said children would melt in the rain or be traumatized, do not put words in my mouth. If you want to feel superior over cart returns, more power to you. Must be a very sad life to be sanctimonious over cart returns for gawd sake. People on occassion do not return carts and it is being made out to be up there with murder and torture. So many Jesus Christs running around the DIS board.![]()
Brilliant It's good of you to leave the cart shiny clean for the next person. Maybe you should start a thread about the inconsiderate people who have the gall to leave their dingy carts in the corral w/out a spit and shine.
Thanks for the kind word.
I mean, those who say that they can't properly return and clean their cart due to having their children with them?
Hello! Young children are especially handy for getting clean the wheels and lower part of the cart! Indeed, on those days in Spring when the temperature is over 110 degrees I actually leave it to the children to do all the cleaning, waxing and maintenance (like when one wheel is a bit 'shaky'; children should be taught early about how to use different type of screwdrivers and wrenches).
Respectfully - is there a reason, after she gets back to the car by leaning on a carriage, that YOU don't return it to a designated area?My mother has a bad back, so when were out we have to drive around until we find a parking space with a cart. she needs to lean on it to get into the store, where she transfers to one of those electric ones.
Respectfully - is there a reason, after she gets back to the car by leaning on a carriage, that YOU don't return it to a designated area?
Entirely separate from that, but apropos of this conversation - I just stopped at the supermarket.
There are three HP spaces, parallel to the store. I was parked in the closest one. As I was approaching my car, there was a large SUV blocking the other two spaces, with two women loading groceries into it (I think - they were about done by the time I got to my car). One got in the passenger seat, one got in the rear seat behind the driver as I approached my trunk. They were leaving, and ended up leaving - despite my best efforts at a dirty look and rolling my eyes - the cart IN A HANDICAP SPACE.
Across the aisle from us was a completely empty cart corral. It's not even as if the person returning the cart would have had to walk anywhere unsupported, if that was an issue - the vehicle could have driven maybe ten feet at an angle, and the person could have gotten right in.
I have 3 kids. I used to haul all of them to the store with me. Two were walking age and one was a baby. Somehow I still managed to get that cart back where it belonged. To not do so is rude and lazy. I have always returned the cart. Always. Whether rain, slush, kids. If I borrow something I put it back. You use it, you put it back when you are done with it. That is the way my parents raised me. Nothing to do with superiority. Everything to do with what is right.
WOW I never realized that there are acually perfect people in the world.
I have been known to leave a cart astray here and there. Do I feel guilty. No. Should I, I don't know after reading this post.
Forty five years ago, ONE supermarket here had an arrangement where, after you paid for your groceries and rolled your cart to the inside front of the store, and drove up to the outside, employees put your bags on a conveyor belt and sent them outside. My parents never shopped there. Too expensive - and this is, and was, an average suburban community with oretty average incomes.
No store I know tells customers to check out their own purchases, although many do have a few registers that allow customers to do this - vast difference.
Bag it yourself? At the self-check counters, yeah; at the cashier-operated registers - never, except by my choice (in, granted, my experience - I tend not to stick around and bag other customers' items).
Bring it to the car yourself? Again, I've never known a store that provided employees to transport customers' carts/purchases to the vehicles on a regular basis, in many, many years of shopping. Some will offer under certain circumstances, and most will comply if asked.
So, really, in forty-five years, the only thing that's changed in my experience is that many stores now provide relatively convenient cart drop-off areas, hoping that customers will stop leaving carts at random throughout the lot.