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-   -   Stupid Store Employees / Inconsiderate Stores (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/82738-re-stupid-store-employees-inconsiderate-stores.html)

Gene December 22nd 04 11:47 AM

Stupid Store Employees / Inconsiderate Stores
 
On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 04:12:00 -0600, wrote:

I just came home from a Menards store. I needed to buy another
livestock watering tank. The store only had one 70 gallon and one 100
gallon tank in stock. Both were stored outdoors. The temperature is
zero today. I decided to take the 70 gallon one, paid for it, and
went outside to the lot to get it. Now. you tell me why they had them
on the shelves with the OPEN


It's a good thing I didn't buy the 100 gallon one. That one was about
12 feet up on the shelf, and since it did not have other items above
it, like the one I bought, and was on the top shelf, I have a feeling
that one was entirely filled with ice. There is no way we could have
lifted that.

Well, I would have looked at the tank first, then knowing that the
100 gallon one was probably more full, I'd have bought that one and
had the joy of watching those workers sweat pulling it down.

this is just plain assenine. If I weren't for the fact that I needed
the tank immediately, they would have lost a sale, and I would have
gone elsewhere to buy one. But then too, could I have found one?


Possibly, should check the phone book.

This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are full of
Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont stock "normal"
items. Last week I was at Walmart and decided to buy another garden
hose, since I had one break. I bought a hose at Walmart during the
summer and found it to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the
price. Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single hose.
I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who said they do have
them in storage, but can not get to them, until all the Christmas


This is called "Seasonal" items Like lawnmowers, chippers, and such.
You're more likely to buy them during the time they are normally used,
instead of those "Rare" occasions.

Of course, why not go back to Mennys and buy one there instead?




enigma December 22nd 04 01:59 PM

wrote in
:

This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are
full of Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont
stock "normal" items. Last week I was at Walmart and
decided to buy another garden hose, since I had one break.
I bought a hose at Walmart during the summer and found it
to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the price.
Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single
hose. I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who
said they do have them in storage, but can not get to them,
until all the Christmas merchandise is gone. Well, excuse
me..... I have nothing against Christmas decorations, but
my animals need water 365 days a year. They dont stop
drinking at Christmas. I also use my manure fork all year
round, as do I use shovels and other yard type tools. If I
break one of these, I need to buy another, and can not wait
until all the Christmas decorations are put away. Even the
local farm supply store is lacking in farm items, but well
stocked with Christmas decorations. They were out of
electric fence gate handles the other day, and those things
break more often in winter due to ice, than any other time
of year. Yet, not a one in the store........ This is very
inconsiderate to their customers and it really ****es me
off !


because hoses, lawnmowers, rakes & shovels are "seasonal"
items. it would be a waste of the stores shelf space to stock
certain items year round. do you also bitch when you can't buy
a string of lights in July? i doubt it.
it seems shortsighted not to have an extra hose or two around
anyway. as you say, it's something we use year round, so buy a
couple at the end of season sales & you'll have them in the
winter when you let your freeze... (we blow ours out with a
compressor after filling the stock tanks. haven't had a freeze
or burst since we started doing it & it gets -50F here
sometimes. we can always get water through.
also, those easily broken plastic gate handles? ever think
they are probably sold out because you aren't the only one
breaking them? sometimes items get backordered & it's not the
farm stores fault they run out. just keep spares on hand or
use gaffer tape.
you have to be responsible for your own inventory of tools,
instead of getting ****ed at the store.
lee

rck December 22nd 04 02:49 PM


At another store the kid was sweeping the floor around some tables where
people eat. Then he began to sweep the tables with the same broom he used
for the floor. The other workers had to tell him not to do that. duh!!!
They told him to go get cleanser and use a fresh clean cloth.
Marina


I was in a restaurant in Connecticut and the guy was mopping the tables with
the same mop that he used on the floor, and he just wheeled his bucket out
of the restroom. And this was at a nationally known fast-food place.

Bob



Lee K December 22nd 04 02:49 PM


"Marina" wrote in message
news:1103724244.6b3197fbbaf5c154de99a1234cc9049c@b ubbanews...
enigma wrote in

At another store the kid was sweeping the floor around some tables where
people eat. Then he began to sweep the tables with the same broom he used
for the floor. The other workers had to tell him not to do that. duh!!!
They told him to go get cleanser and use a fresh clean cloth.
Marina


Was that the kid wearing mistletoe hanging off the back of his belt?



Roger Shoaf December 22nd 04 03:03 PM


wrote in message
...

WHY, WHY, WHY don't they put them on
the shelves upside down? It don't take a rocket scientist to figure
that out????


I bet they don't have too many common sense types let alone rocket scientist
types working there.




This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are full of
Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont stock "normal"
items. Last week I was at Walmart and decided to buy another garden
hose, since I had one break. I bought a hose at Walmart during the
summer and found it to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the
price. Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single hose.
I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who said they do have
them in storage, but can not get to them, until all the Christmas
merchandise is gone. Well, excuse me..... I have nothing against
Christmas decorations, but my animals need water 365 days a year.
They dont stop drinking at Christmas.


The old time hardware store that might have gone out of business when
Wal-Mart and Menards came to town probably had hoses in stock year round.




I also use my manure fork all
year round, as do I use shovels and other yard type tools. If I break
one of these, I need to buy another, and can not wait until all the
Christmas decorations are put away. Even the local farm supply store
is lacking in farm items, but well stocked with Christmas decorations.
They were out of electric fence gate handles the other day, and those
things break more often in winter due to ice, than any other time of
year. Yet, not a one in the store........ This is very inconsiderate
to their customers and it really ****es me off !


What gets me is the Christmas stuff arrives tight after school starts.

--

Roger Shoaf

About the time I had mastered getting the toothpaste back in the tube, then
they come up with this striped stuff.



John Willis December 22nd 04 03:32 PM

On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 04:12:00 -0600, scribbled
this interesting note:

This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are full of
Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont stock "normal"
items. Last week I was at Walmart and decided to buy another garden
hose, since I had one break. I bought a hose at Walmart during the
summer and found it to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the
price. Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single hose.
I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who said they do have
them in storage, but can not get to them, until all the Christmas
merchandise is gone. Well, excuse me..... I have nothing against
Christmas decorations, but my animals need water 365 days a year.
They dont stop drinking at Christmas. I also use my manure fork all
year round, as do I use shovels and other yard type tools. If I break
one of these, I need to buy another, and can not wait until all the
Christmas decorations are put away. Even the local farm supply store
is lacking in farm items, but well stocked with Christmas decorations.
They were out of electric fence gate handles the other day, and those
things break more often in winter due to ice, than any other time of
year. Yet, not a one in the store........ This is very inconsiderate
to their customers and it really ****es me off


Simple. Stop buying things from Wal-Mart and go to a real store that
carries things you need all year 'round!


--
John Willis
(Remove the Primes before e-mailing me)

Doug Kanter December 22nd 04 04:09 PM

"Marina" wrote in message
news:1103724244.6b3197fbbaf5c154de99a1234cc9049c@b ubbanews...
enigma wrote in
:

wrote in
:

This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are
full of Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont
stock "normal" items. Last week I was at Walmart and
decided to buy another garden hose, since I had one break.
I bought a hose at Walmart during the summer and found it
to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the price.
Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single
hose. I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who
said they do have them in storage, but can not get to them,
until all the Christmas merchandise is gone. Well, excuse
me..... I have nothing against Christmas decorations, but
my animals need water 365 days a year. They dont stop
drinking at Christmas. I also use my manure fork all year
round, as do I use shovels and other yard type tools. If I
break one of these, I need to buy another, and can not wait
until all the Christmas decorations are put away. Even the
local farm supply store is lacking in farm items, but well
stocked with Christmas decorations. They were out of
electric fence gate handles the other day, and those things
break more often in winter due to ice, than any other time
of year. Yet, not a one in the store........ This is very
inconsiderate to their customers and it really ****es me
off !


because hoses, lawnmowers, rakes & shovels are "seasonal"
items. it would be a waste of the stores shelf space to stock
certain items year round. do you also bitch when you can't buy
a string of lights in July? i doubt it.
it seems shortsighted not to have an extra hose or two around
anyway. as you say, it's something we use year round, so buy a
couple at the end of season sales & you'll have them in the
winter when you let your freeze... (we blow ours out with a
compressor after filling the stock tanks. haven't had a freeze
or burst since we started doing it & it gets -50F here
sometimes. we can always get water through.
also, those easily broken plastic gate handles? ever think
they are probably sold out because you aren't the only one
breaking them? sometimes items get backordered & it's not the
farm stores fault they run out. just keep spares on hand or
use gaffer tape.
you have to be responsible for your own inventory of tools,
instead of getting ****ed at the store.
lee


I went to the store yesterday and bought 6 bottles of Pepsi in the 2 liter
size. The cashier asked me if I wanted them all in bags. I said why

would
you ask me that and she said some people like to carry them loose.
So I told her that it made no sense for me to carry 6 of those big bottles
without bags.
I also had 3 half gallons of milk,too
Like I want to carry all of that stuff loose? oh brother!


The opposite: Grocery shopping this past weekend - had a bunch of coupons
for sponges. Bought 6 packages. Cashier put 2 packages in a bag and tossed
it in my cart. Did the same with the other 4. Nothing else in the bags. I
asked her if she'd ever seen what landfills look like, and got a vacant
stare. Lights on, nobody home.



At another store the kid was sweeping the floor around some tables where
people eat. Then he began to sweep the tables with the same broom he used
for the floor. The other workers had to tell him not to do that. duh!!!
They told him to go get cleanser and use a fresh clean cloth.


It seems there are millions of kids who were dropped on their heads
repeatedly when younger. :-)



Jeff Wisnia December 22nd 04 04:21 PM

wrote:

I just came home from a Menards store.rant snipped



Mark


Just keep repeating to yourself:

1. "Common sense isn't very common"

2. "That's why I'm where I'm at and they're where their at."

3. "If they were all as smart as me the competition would be much fiercer."

and stuff like that....

My prize ****off for yesterday was picking up my shirts at the
cleaner/laundry after having asked them to please replace a lost collar
button on one shirt when I left them off. I glanced at the shirt to make
sure they'd done it and saw that the button they grabbed to sew on was
about 50% larger in diameter than the other one. When I pointed that out
to the clerk she didn't seem to think it mattered, and said, "So what,
it works doesen't it?"

Jeff
--
Jeffry Wisnia

(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)

"As long as there are final exams, there will be prayer in public
schools"

Andy Hill December 22nd 04 04:25 PM

"rck" wrote:
I was in a restaurant in Connecticut and the guy was mopping the tables with
the same mop that he used on the floor, and he just wheeled his bucket out
of the restroom. And this was at a nationally known fast-food place.

He's mopping the tables with the floor mop. You're eating there. Who's the
dummy? ;-)

twstanley December 22nd 04 04:51 PM

Did you ask if they had a forklift? Most of the farm and home stores
around here do, they could have used that to move the tanks up on the
rack.

Personally, I would have flipped the tank over and tried to get the ice
out that way. Of course if it was one of the metal tanks with the
ridged sides and the lip on top, it probably wouldn't have worked. I
like the Rubbermaid tanks, stepped sides so you can flip them over and
the ice just drops out even if frozen solid.

- Tim


Ann December 22nd 04 04:56 PM

On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 04:12:00 -0600, maradclif wrote:

WHY, WHY, WHY don't they put them on
the shelves upside down? It don't take a rocket scientist to figure
that out????


So, why not have it put in your truck upside down? Let the ice melt
enough for it to drop down on the bed, lift the tank off, remove tailgate,
back down an incline at a sprightly speed, and jam on the brakes?

John Willis December 22nd 04 05:02 PM

On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 11:21:16 -0500, Jeff Wisnia
scribbled this interesting note:


My prize ****off for yesterday was picking up my shirts at the
cleaner/laundry after having asked them to please replace a lost collar
button on one shirt when I left them off. I glanced at the shirt to make
sure they'd done it and saw that the button they grabbed to sew on was
about 50% larger in diameter than the other one. When I pointed that out
to the clerk she didn't seem to think it mattered, and said, "So what,
it works doesen't it?"


Next time, if you patronize the same establishment, I guess you'll
have to be a bit more specific since clear thought seems to be in
short supply there!:~)


--
John Willis
(Remove the Primes before e-mailing me)

Gary December 22nd 04 05:12 PM

Hi,

This should be a good lesson for you! Keep spares..

I admit that sometime you run out of spares. But if you replace your stock
before it gets to low then you most probably won't have an emergency.

I try to keep my fence items on hand. Those dam animals don't know anything
about material science. Plastic does get brittle as the temp goes down but
the animal doesn't.

As for the quality of store personnel, we as a nation expect something for
nothing generally, Walmart is a good example. The price of items is
reflected by the support people needed to provide said items. So if you buy
from a Walmart, Menards' or where ever. You should expect to get service
that is reflected by the price you pay.

The class of people who work at the bargain price stores/suppliers tends to
be a younger non-experienced person. Some are just working to get by while
others are just working while still in school. Sure occasionally you will
get a older person who is just working to supplement the retirement income,
who might have some experience in the area. Even then you cannot depend on
that!

I see our local TSC is advertising for help with farm experience. Most
farmers I know don't have time to work in TSC or the like for the
advertised wages. Lot of the younger experienced hands wouldn't work for
that wage either. So they hire a person who has never worked on a farm let
alone step onto one.

I do not expect much from the clerks. I just want one that can point me to
the item I am requesting. Or get the item from stock. Even at this level it
can be a demanding task. Simple example, I was at the store in the cheese
section looking for some fetta. I asked a store clerk if they stocked it.
He said 'What's that?'. I explained what fetta cheese was and he had to go
to his supervisor (older about 45'ish). He didn't know! he called the deli
department. Sure enough it was stocked there about 100 feet away. Sure not
in their department but the idea of someone that works in a dairy
department doesn't know about dairy is absurd. But education for ones duty
is not necessary if all you do is move items from a cooler too the shelf.

Same goes for any area of the work place. Most people will do enough to just
get by. As another poster stated about the mom & pop hardware store. They
would go out of their way to help you. If they could provide something the
clerks would find a way to get the desired item or point you to another
provider if all else fails.


Regards and God speed,

Gary

The magic is in the Magician not the wand!


-----------== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Uncensored Usenet News ==----------
http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
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rck December 22nd 04 05:37 PM


"Andy Hill" wrote in message
...
"rck" wrote:
I was in a restaurant in Connecticut and the guy was mopping the tables
with
the same mop that he used on the floor, and he just wheeled his bucket out
of the restroom. And this was at a nationally known fast-food place.

He's mopping the tables with the floor mop. You're eating there. Who's
the
dummy? ;-)


I'm not the dummy, I left before ordering.

Bob



rck December 22nd 04 05:41 PM


"John Willis" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 04:12:00 -0600, scribbled
this interesting note:

This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are full of
Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont stock "normal"
items. Last week I was at Walmart and decided to buy another garden
hose, since I had one break. I bought a hose at Walmart during the
summer and found it to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the
price. Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single hose.
I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who said they do have
them in storage, but can not get to them, until all the Christmas
merchandise is gone. Well, excuse me..... I have nothing against
Christmas decorations, but my animals need water 365 days a year.
They dont stop drinking at Christmas. I also use my manure fork all
year round, as do I use shovels and other yard type tools. If I break
one of these, I need to buy another, and can not wait until all the
Christmas decorations are put away. Even the local farm supply store
is lacking in farm items, but well stocked with Christmas decorations.
They were out of electric fence gate handles the other day, and those
things break more often in winter due to ice, than any other time of
year. Yet, not a one in the store........ This is very inconsiderate
to their customers and it really ****es me off


Simple. Stop buying things from Wal-Mart and go to a real store that
carries things you need all year 'round!


--
John Willis
(Remove the Primes before e-mailing me)


Bottom line is, customers will put up with rude clerks and poor service
rather than pay a reasonable price at a full service local hardware store.

Bob



Ron M. December 22nd 04 06:03 PM

What bugs me to no end these days is going to a store like Home Depot
or Lowe's and, IF you can find somebody to help you, it's somebody
pretending to be Bob Vila, when in reality he doesn't know which end of
a hammer to hit the nail with. I do NOT mind if he just says, "I don't
know."

Once I was in Home Depot looking for a tube of caulking. I wanted the
kind that goes around the edge of a bathtub. Not around the floor, but
the upper rim, where it gets wet. Of course, it needed to be
waterproof. So this dingbat walks up and I ask him, "are you very
experienced with caulking?" and he blares, "oh, yes sir, absolutely,
what can I help you with?" I told him, and he scratches his chin, looks
around and pulls out a tube of Liquid Nails!

He stood there frowning and studying the lable for a couple of minutes
(while I'm just STANDING there), and finally said, "well this would
probably work... see, it says 'water resistant' right here....
anything else I can help you with today?"

I just walked off. I have this vivid mental image of that guy caulking
his bathtub with Liquid Nails..

Ron M.


Edwin Pawlowski December 22nd 04 06:16 PM


"rck"

I'm not the dummy, I left before ordering.

Bob


Reminds me of the time we went to a McDonald's in Norwich CT. We ordered at
the counter and my wife waited while I went to the restroom. I returned and
demanded my money back as I was not going to eat anything prepared by
employees of that place. We left and a few others in line left also. If was
disgustingly filthy and looked as though it had been that way for a long
time.



Bob S. December 22nd 04 06:38 PM


Ron M. wrote:
What bugs me to no end these days is going to a store like Home Depot
or Lowe's and, IF you can find somebody to help you, it's somebody
pretending to be Bob Vila, when in reality he doesn't know which end

of
a hammer to hit the nail with. I do NOT mind if he just says, "I

don't
know."


From another perspective: I worked with tools all my life and am a

pretty good handiman. After retirement I worked in Lowes ToolWorld for
a while. When customers learned that I actually knew what I was talking
about, they wouldn't let anyone else but me help them. I even had
customers ask me to follow them to other departments to help them. Not
that I was that smart or good, but I never tried to BS them and they
appreciated it.

Bob S.


Doug Kanter December 22nd 04 07:02 PM


"Bob S." wrote in message
oups.com...

Ron M. wrote:
What bugs me to no end these days is going to a store like Home Depot
or Lowe's and, IF you can find somebody to help you, it's somebody
pretending to be Bob Vila, when in reality he doesn't know which end

of
a hammer to hit the nail with. I do NOT mind if he just says, "I

don't
know."


From another perspective: I worked with tools all my life and am a

pretty good handiman. After retirement I worked in Lowes ToolWorld for
a while. When customers learned that I actually knew what I was talking
about, they wouldn't let anyone else but me help them. I even had
customers ask me to follow them to other departments to help them. Not
that I was that smart or good, but I never tried to BS them and they
appreciated it.

Bob S.


There used to be a guy like that at Dick's Sporting Goods in the fishing
department. Must've been a mistake, putting an actual fishing addict in that
department. The guy was amazing. Some suit at the home office must've found
out that he was selling people 3 times more lures than they came in for,
showing them the best knots to use with the products, and writing down
locations where he'd had some luck catching fish. They moved him to the
clothing department.



Suzie-Q December 22nd 04 07:02 PM

Did you happen to mention this to the store manager?



In article ,
wrote:

- I just came home from a Menards store. I needed to buy another
- livestock watering tank. The store only had one 70 gallon and one 100
- gallon tank in stock. Both were stored outdoors. The temperature is
- zero today. I decided to take the 70 gallon one, paid for it, and
- went outside to the lot to get it. Now. you tell me why they had them
- on the shelves with the OPEN side UP. The tank was half filled with
- ice, and it took 3 guys to get it off the 5 foot high shelf, and load
- it in my truck with all that ice in it. I am now running a stock tank
- heater inside of it, (still on my truck), so that I can bucket out the
- melted ice and unload the thing. WHY, WHY, WHY don't they put them on
- the shelves upside down? It don't take a rocket scientist to figure
- that out????
-
- It's a good thing I didn't buy the 100 gallon one. That one was about
- 12 feet up on the shelf, and since it did not have other items above
- it, like the one I bought, and was on the top shelf, I have a feeling
- that one was entirely filled with ice. There is no way we could have
- lifted that.
-
- This just makes no sense to me. Even a complete moron should be able
- to figure out that they should be stored with the OPEN side DOWN. I
- am not cutting down Menards, I do a lot of business with them, and am
- generally satisfied with their products and customer service. But
- this is just plain assenine. If I weren't for the fact that I needed
- the tank immediately, they would have lost a sale, and I would have
- gone elsewhere to buy one. But then too, could I have found one?
-
- This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are full of
- Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont stock "normal"
- items. Last week I was at Walmart and decided to buy another garden
- hose, since I had one break. I bought a hose at Walmart during the
- summer and found it to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the
- price. Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single hose.
- I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who said they do have
- them in storage, but can not get to them, until all the Christmas
- merchandise is gone. Well, excuse me..... I have nothing against
- Christmas decorations, but my animals need water 365 days a year.
- They dont stop drinking at Christmas. I also use my manure fork all
- year round, as do I use shovels and other yard type tools. If I break
- one of these, I need to buy another, and can not wait until all the
- Christmas decorations are put away. Even the local farm supply store
- is lacking in farm items, but well stocked with Christmas decorations.
- They were out of electric fence gate handles the other day, and those
- things break more often in winter due to ice, than any other time of
- year. Yet, not a one in the store........ This is very inconsiderate
- to their customers and it really ****es me off !
-
-
- Mark



--
8^)~~~ Sue (remove the x to e-mail)
~~~~~~
"I reserve the absolute right to be smarter
today than I was yesterday." -Adlai Stevenson

http://www.suzanne-eckhardt.com/
***Revelation 22:12*** ICQ: 349878998
http://www.intergnat.com/malebashing/

Norminn December 22nd 04 07:08 PM


clipped

At another store the kid was sweeping the floor around some tables where
people eat. Then he began to sweep the tables with the same broom he used
for the floor. The other workers had to tell him not to do that. duh!!!
They told him to go get cleanser and use a fresh clean cloth.



It seems there are millions of kids who were dropped on their heads
repeatedly when younger. :-)



Sounds like a college student. Probably working on MBA :o) How do so
many survive? :o)


Noozer December 22nd 04 08:17 PM

You expect consumers to be any more sensible than the idiots behind the
counter?

How do you think things have gotten so bad to begin with?

"Suzie-Q" wrote in message
...
Did you happen to mention this to the store manager?



In article ,
wrote:

- I just came home from a Menards store. I needed to buy another
- livestock watering tank. The store only had one 70 gallon and one 100
- gallon tank in stock. Both were stored outdoors. snip




Maren Purves December 22nd 04 09:08 PM

enigma wrote:
wrote in
:


This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are
full of Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont
stock "normal" items. Last week I was at Walmart and
decided to buy another garden hose, since I had one break.
I bought a hose at Walmart during the summer and found it
to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the price.
Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single
hose. I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who
said they do have them in storage, but can not get to them,
until all the Christmas merchandise is gone. Well, excuse
me..... I have nothing against Christmas decorations, but
my animals need water 365 days a year. They dont stop
drinking at Christmas. I also use my manure fork all year
round, as do I use shovels and other yard type tools. If I
break one of these, I need to buy another, and can not wait
until all the Christmas decorations are put away. Even the
local farm supply store is lacking in farm items, but well
stocked with Christmas decorations. They were out of
electric fence gate handles the other day, and those things
break more often in winter due to ice, than any other time
of year. Yet, not a one in the store........ This is very
inconsiderate to their customers and it really ****es me
off !



because hoses, lawnmowers, rakes & shovels are "seasonal"
items. it would be a waste of the stores shelf space to stock
certain items year round.


that depends on where you are.
While our lawn does grow slower in winter, it still needs to be mowed.
Also, winter usually means drought here.

Maren, in HI.
(usually no ice below 10,000 ft, but we do get snow in July on occasion
too, above 10,000ft)

George December 22nd 04 10:46 PM


"rck" wrote in message
ink.net...


Bottom line is, customers will put up with rude clerks and poor service
rather than pay a reasonable price at a full service local hardware store.

Bob

Thats what made me wonder about this thread. The OP was annoyed at how big
box stores operate but probably helped put the local store out of business.



effi December 22nd 04 11:17 PM

don't set yourself up for disappointment, plan your shopping trips better to
be more successful

calling ahead to see if they have in stock what you want minimizes wasted
trips

you're better to buy off the net or over the phone sometimes by the time you
factor in transportation costs and the cost of your time to "go
shopping",,,,,,,,,and,,,,,,,,,driving around in a vehicle to "go shopping"
can create significant physical and mental stress in humans (evidenced by
your last sentence)

do your animals need water 366 days a year in leap years? ; )


wrote in message
...
I just came home from a Menards store. I needed to buy another
livestock watering tank. The store only had one 70 gallon and one 100
gallon tank in stock. Both were stored outdoors. The temperature is
zero today. I decided to take the 70 gallon one, paid for it, and
went outside to the lot to get it. Now. you tell me why they had them
on the shelves with the OPEN side UP. The tank was half filled with
ice, and it took 3 guys to get it off the 5 foot high shelf, and load
it in my truck with all that ice in it. I am now running a stock tank
heater inside of it, (still on my truck), so that I can bucket out the
melted ice and unload the thing. WHY, WHY, WHY don't they put them on
the shelves upside down? It don't take a rocket scientist to figure
that out????

It's a good thing I didn't buy the 100 gallon one. That one was about
12 feet up on the shelf, and since it did not have other items above
it, like the one I bought, and was on the top shelf, I have a feeling
that one was entirely filled with ice. There is no way we could have
lifted that.

This just makes no sense to me. Even a complete moron should be able
to figure out that they should be stored with the OPEN side DOWN. I
am not cutting down Menards, I do a lot of business with them, and am
generally satisfied with their products and customer service. But
this is just plain assenine. If I weren't for the fact that I needed
the tank immediately, they would have lost a sale, and I would have
gone elsewhere to buy one. But then too, could I have found one?

This brings up another gripe of mine. When the stores are full of
Christmas items, and I mean ALL stores, they dont stock "normal"
items. Last week I was at Walmart and decided to buy another garden
hose, since I had one break. I bought a hose at Walmart during the
summer and found it to be one of the best hoses I have gotten for the
price. Well, I was shocked to find they did not have one single hose.
I asked the clerk, who had to call the manager, who said they do have
them in storage, but can not get to them, until all the Christmas
merchandise is gone. Well, excuse me..... I have nothing against
Christmas decorations, but my animals need water 365 days a year.
They dont stop drinking at Christmas. I also use my manure fork all
year round, as do I use shovels and other yard type tools. If I break
one of these, I need to buy another, and can not wait until all the
Christmas decorations are put away. Even the local farm supply store
is lacking in farm items, but well stocked with Christmas decorations.
They were out of electric fence gate handles the other day, and those
things break more often in winter due to ice, than any other time of
year. Yet, not a one in the store........ This is very inconsiderate
to their customers and it really ****es me off !


Mark




Fran December 23rd 04 01:09 AM

"Jeff Wisnia" wrote in message

My prize ****off for yesterday was picking up my shirts at the
cleaner/laundry after having asked them to please replace a lost collar
button on one shirt when I left them off. I glanced at the shirt to make
sure they'd done it and saw that the button they grabbed to sew on was
about 50% larger in diameter than the other one. When I pointed that out
to the clerk she didn't seem to think it mattered, and said, "So what,
it works doesen't it?"


And you can't put on your own button???????????????

I regard that as being both lazy and deserving of being ****ed off.



Tekkie December 23rd 04 02:50 AM

Jeff Wisnia posted for all of us....


My prize ****off for yesterday was picking up my shirts at the
cleaner/laundry after having asked them to please replace a lost collar
button on one shirt when I left them off. I glanced at the shirt to make
sure they'd done it and saw that the button they grabbed to sew on was
about 50% larger in diameter than the other one. When I pointed that out
to the clerk she didn't seem to think it mattered, and said, "So what,
it works doesen't it?"

Jeff

Rip off the small button and take it back. 1/3 chance of big button**a
match, 1/3 of another small button**different match, or 1/3 chance of
something completely different.
--
Tekkie

Tekkie December 23rd 04 02:53 AM

Gary posted for all of us....


I do not expect much from the clerks. I just want one that can point me to
the item I am requesting. Or get the item from stock. Even at this level it
can be a demanding task. Simple example, I was at the store in the cheese
section looking for some fetta. I asked a store clerk if they stocked it.
He said 'What's that?'. I explained what fetta cheese was and he had to go
to his supervisor (older about 45'ish). He didn't know! he called the deli
department. Sure enough it was stocked there about 100 feet away. Sure not
in their department but the idea of someone that works in a dairy
department doesn't know about dairy is absurd. But education for ones duty
is not necessary if all you do is move items from a cooler too the shelf.

Should have asked for Fromunda
--
Tekkie

Tekkie December 23rd 04 02:55 AM

Doug Kanter posted for all of us....


There used to be a guy like that at Dick's Sporting Goods in the fishing
department. Must've been a mistake, putting an actual fishing addict in that
department. The guy was amazing. Some suit at the home office must've found
out that he was selling people 3 times more lures than they came in for,
showing them the best knots to use with the products, and writing down
locations where he'd had some luck catching fish. They moved him to the
clothing department.

He's now in charge of the fur lined jock straps...
--
Tekkie

Larry Caldwell December 23rd 04 03:13 AM

In article ,
(Doug Kanter) says...

It seems there are millions of kids who were dropped on their heads
repeatedly when younger. :-)


Remember, half the population is below average intelligence. Some of
them are way below. It is fortunate that Ronald McDonald has created
menial jobs for them.

--
http://home.teleport.com/~larryc

Phisherman December 23rd 04 03:29 AM

I avoid going to (any) stores in December. It is too hectic and too
hard on credit cards. I have plenty of household repairs to do with
everything I need.

Phisherman December 23rd 04 03:33 AM

On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 14:49:03 GMT, "rck"
wrote:


At another store the kid was sweeping the floor around some tables where
people eat. Then he began to sweep the tables with the same broom he used
for the floor. The other workers had to tell him not to do that. duh!!!
They told him to go get cleanser and use a fresh clean cloth.
Marina


I was in a restaurant in Connecticut and the guy was mopping the tables with
the same mop that he used on the floor, and he just wheeled his bucket out
of the restroom. And this was at a nationally known fast-food place.

Bob


I worked in a restaurant that made the salad in the same sink where
the floor mop was rinsed (I'll leave it to the reader to determine
which restaurant). I guess what you don't know won't hurt you.


Doug Kanter December 23rd 04 03:46 AM


"George" wrote in message
...

"rck" wrote in message
ink.net...


Bottom line is, customers will put up with rude clerks and poor service
rather than pay a reasonable price at a full service local hardware

store.

Bob

Thats what made me wonder about this thread. The OP was annoyed at how big
box stores operate but probably helped put the local store out of

business.



Hey! You stop injecting facts into this discussion RIGHT THIS MINUTE! :-)



Stephen Moore December 23rd 04 12:57 PM

snip

I went to the store yesterday and bought 6 bottles of Pepsi in the 2 liter
size. The cashier asked me if I wanted them all in bags. I said why would
you ask me that and she said some people like to carry them loose.
So I told her that it made no sense for me to carry 6 of those big bottles
without bags.
I also had 3 half gallons of milk,too
Like I want to carry all of that stuff loose? oh brother!

Those recycled bags must cost .0001 each. If she manages to talk
10,000 customers out of them, and the are 10 checkers working at any
one time, well, let's see the store saves......


At another store the kid was sweeping the floor around some tables where
people eat. Then he began to sweep the tables with the same broom he used
for the floor. The other workers had to tell him not to do that. duh!!!
They told him to go get cleanser and use a fresh clean cloth.
Marina


I've always wondered if this is because the schools have stopped
teaching the story problems I had as a kid (50's and 60's)?. We were
taught to think or at least the effort was made. The ones that go.
If Sally had 3 quarts of ice cream and wanted to give Nancy 1/3 and
save the rest for Billy, how many planets would completely rotate
around the sun by the time most kids today would figure it out?

An interesting interview question I read about once was "if a room is
9x12 with an 8 foot ceiling, how many pennies could be stacked in that
room?" The interviewer's purpose was not testing the applicant for
the answer, rather he wanted the applicant to explain to him how he
would calculate the answer, ie, his thinking process. More of this
needs to be taught and re-inforced in the government schools today,
but we all know that's not going to happen. If the answer is not A,
B, C, or none of the above, they're lost.

__________________________________________________ _____________________
SteveM

Stephen Moore December 23rd 04 01:04 PM

I went to the store yesterday and bought 6 bottles of Pepsi in the 2 liter
size. The cashier asked me if I wanted them all in bags. I said why would
you ask me that and she said some people like to carry them loose.
So I told her that it made no sense for me to carry 6 of those big bottles
without bags.
I also had 3 half gallons of milk,too
Like I want to carry all of that stuff loose? oh brother!


Or, maybe you were on Candid Camera and didn't know it. One episode
they had a bagger follow the customer out to their car and ask for the
bags back as they were running out.
__________________________________________________ _____________________
SteveM

Doug Kanter December 23rd 04 02:20 PM


"Stephen Moore" wrote in message
...
I went to the store yesterday and bought 6 bottles of Pepsi in the 2

liter
size. The cashier asked me if I wanted them all in bags. I said why

would
you ask me that and she said some people like to carry them loose.
So I told her that it made no sense for me to carry 6 of those big

bottles
without bags.
I also had 3 half gallons of milk,too
Like I want to carry all of that stuff loose? oh brother!


Or, maybe you were on Candid Camera and didn't know it. One episode
they had a bagger follow the customer out to their car and ask for the
bags back as they were running out.
__________________________________________________ _____________________
SteveM


My favorite was one where they placed traffic lights at the intersection of
two narrow sidewalks in Central Park. When the light turned red, pedestrians
stopped and waited. And waited. And waited. Like sheep. :-) And this was 30
years ago, before people generally expected to see others on rollerblades &
bikes in a place like that. Just pedestrians.



(Pete Cresswell) December 23rd 04 02:23 PM

RE/
Remember, half the population is below average intelligence. Some of
them are way below.


I have a recollection that 100 is, by definition, the average IQ....but that
doesn't match up with my Webster's New Collegiate's definition of IQ. Can
anybody cite some source that explains the number?

--
PeteCresswell

Noozer December 23rd 04 03:04 PM


"Fran" wrote in message
...
"Jeff Wisnia" wrote in message

My prize ****off for yesterday was picking up my shirts at the
cleaner/laundry after having asked them to please replace a lost collar
button on one shirt when I left them off. I glanced at the shirt to make
sure they'd done it and saw that the button they grabbed to sew on was
about 50% larger in diameter than the other one. When I pointed that out
to the clerk she didn't seem to think it mattered, and said, "So what,
it works doesen't it?"


And you can't put on your own button???????????????

I regard that as being both lazy and deserving of being ****ed off.


Not everyone can sew.

I assume you can change sparkplugs, etc... and never pay anyone for any
services that you could do yourself? Must be nice to bake your own bread and
weave your own carpets.



Noozer December 23rd 04 03:05 PM


"Phisherman" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 14:49:03 GMT, "rck"
wrote:


At another store the kid was sweeping the floor around some tables

where
people eat. Then he began to sweep the tables with the same broom he

used
for the floor. The other workers had to tell him not to do that.

duh!!!
They told him to go get cleanser and use a fresh clean cloth.
Marina


I was in a restaurant in Connecticut and the guy was mopping the tables

with
the same mop that he used on the floor, and he just wheeled his bucket

out
of the restroom. And this was at a nationally known fast-food place.

Bob


I worked in a restaurant that made the salad in the same sink where
the floor mop was rinsed (I'll leave it to the reader to determine
which restaurant). I guess what you don't know won't hurt you.


If you know that this is a fact you SHOULD make the public aware.

Any restaurant that does stuff like this should be driven out of business.



(Pete Cresswell) December 23rd 04 07:24 PM

RE/
Those thin-blooded people in Florida wear down jackets when the temp
dips below 70?


Long, long ago and far, far away I was sitting on a bench in a tropical
commercial area - wearing a long-sleeve sweater and freezing my butt off because
the temp was down 65 degrees in December. A guy just off the plane from
Montana sits down beside me; apparently feels the need to make conversation; and
says "Sure is hot and muggy...".
--
PeteCresswell


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