• @jqubed
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    9611 months ago

    If they have the corral I put it in the corral. If not I will bring it back to the store or try to avoid taking it to my car in the first place so I can leave it at the store and not come back.

    The key is to return the cart to a designated location where the store is asking that they be returned.

  • originalucifer
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    7111 months ago

    pick one. it doesnt matter as long as you do it.

    people push those carts all aroound the damn store but that last 25-100 feet is just a bridge too far. door or corral.

  • @[email protected]
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    5611 months ago

    European here. I absolutely do NOT understand what everyone here is discussing. When I take the cart at mall, I just simply return it. What’s the biggie? Since I take it from the place closest to my car, I usually return it to the same one where I picked it up. To be honest it never ever even crossed my mind to leave it on the parking spot. Are you, the ones who do this, animals or what?

    • @[email protected]
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      1111 months ago

      It’s a very visible thing when people do it. It’s not common where I’m from, but if 1,000 other people go to a store, then just one person leaving a cart in an awkward place pisses off 999 others.

      It doesn’t take much to make it seem like a lot of people are being inconsiderate, when it’s much more likely that a small minority of people have a very wide reaching emotional impact.

    • @felbane
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      611 months ago

      It is uncommon for US grocery stores and supermarkets to leave carts scattered around the parking lot in corrals on purpose. Typically there’s an employee who frequently retrieves all the carts and puts them in a huge covered stall just by the building entrance, so the corrals are often empty. Hell, some stores don’t have corrals at all.

    • @Bennettiquette
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      411 months ago

      i wonder what the association is between the size of a parking lot and the frequency of its stores buggies not being returned by shoppers. from the pictures of beautiful european cities and towns i’ve seen, walkability seems to be an important development concern. i’m sure not everywhere, but by contrast, many shopping areas in the us are concrete wastelands with stores wrapping around massive, massive parking lots. perhaps parking 1/4 mile away from the store you just left makes it easier for people to excuse themselves from doing the right thing. i guess we don’t have a great track record with doing the right thing in any context though.

      • Jojo
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        311 months ago

        walkability seems to be an important development concern

        While true for more modern development, many beautiful, walkable European cities were simply built before cars were around, so it’s not like they made an extra effort to make them walkable, that’s just how things were done

        • @Bennettiquette
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          311 months ago

          thanks for the insight, which makes sense. stupid cars.

          • Jojo
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            411 months ago

            I mean cars do a lot of good, but yeah. The thing that messed up the US was a policy introduced in some places making a ridiculously high minimum number of parking spaces required for any business. And now, it’s pretty tough to overcome the way that made cities take shape, since now you kind of need to take a car to get places reasonably, meaning places need parking spots to make their customers feel like they can get in… It’s a viscous cycle

            • @Bennettiquette
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              11 months ago

              100%. it seems to me that the broad scaling of community played a critical factor, being born out of the privilege of personal vehicle transportation. now we live in one place, work in another, play in another, eat in another, etc. in some cases sure, maybe that could theoretically give you 3+ different circles of orbit and thus 3 different communities of fellowship and support. from experience though it looks more like an incongruent/lacking distribution of the kind of important ties between others that would otherwise develop organically within in a given community. ultimately it seems to reinforce our isolation and undermines a sense of belonging.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 months ago

      Same, same. Maybe one day I’ll travel there and see for myself. Where I live people just walk 10-20m, get a cart, go shopping, put the groceries in the car, walk the 20m again to return it and drive home. No being a prick being involved at the supermarket. However, I’ve observed that some people don’t return their carts at the IKEA.

    • @DrQuint
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      11 months ago

      deleted by creator

  • Drusas
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    4811 months ago

    They mean the corral. That’s why the stores have the corrals spread out in the parking lot and hire people whose job is partly to bring the carts in.

    • @shyguyblue
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      3411 months ago

      As an introvert, doing a “cart run” was my temporary reprieve from the horrors of retail.

      • @[email protected]
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        3111 months ago

        I had that job in high school. When I first started, someone who’d been doing it for years was showing me the ropes, and he pointed out that sometimes people who live nearby the store would just walk to the store, then walk home with the cart, and leave it at the apartment complex, so he would (and thereby I should) periodically walk down there to collect them.

        I initially thought this was complete BS and I hated that I was being asked to do it. After the first week or so, I realized what was actually up: He was inviting me to take paid breaks every hour or two, during which I got to take a leisurely 20 minute walk down the street and back, and not have to deal with customers or managers or anyone else, and he’d managed to sell this to management as a benefit to the company. He was an awesome co worker.

        • FuglyDuck
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          11 months ago

          that dude is a genius.

        • VulKendov
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          611 months ago

          I actually did have to retrieve carts that were taken from the store, including one of those electric scooter carts. Idk how they manged that, the motors on it could barely cross the street.

      • @HowManyNimons
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        211 months ago

        Ugh I hated that job. People would put mix the trolley sizes in each queue in the corral and I would want to release anthrax. I would be able to predict who was going to block up a corral of small trolleys with their jumbo trolley, just from the shape of their stupid hanging face.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    I have to chime in on this one, I grew up in Oregon and worked at Target a couple of years as a cashier and cart collector. This was by far the most miserable job I have ever had, it sucked. Besides leaving their nasty ass trash and dirty diapers in the carts people would leave them scattered all over the mall parking lot. It was my job to walk a mile or so around the lot that encircled the mall at closing time in the pouring rain and collect them. This was before they had the robots that push them for the workers, so we used a rope attached to the front to steer about 35-40 at once. With out fail id consantly get my sopping wet feet run over by those fucking things while trying to push them back to the store. Not to mention, we’d get the occasional wind storm and the ones that weren’t corraled would blow all over the parking lot crashing into cars. Then we’d get bitched at by the customers. Trust me when you put a cart back in the corral, the people working at the store appreciate it. There’s more than enough other work to get done in retail.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      before they had the robots that push them for the workers

      What you talking bout Willis? Doesn’t every store have some poor schmuck pushing them around by hand?

      • @felbane
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        711 months ago

        The store bolts a cart to one of these:

        https://danetechnologies.com/shopping-cart-retrievers/

        And then the person wrangling carts will pull carts out of the corral and load them up in front of this.

        They carry a remote that makes the retriever move forward, so the employee can just stand at the front of the (sometimes surprisingly long) train of carts and steer it.

        These things push way harder than a teenager in a back support belt could ever accomplish, so it both increases efficiency of retrieval (more carts at once) and reduces the chances of injury.

  • @derf82
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    3711 months ago

    Why have a corral if that’s not good enough? Of course the corral is fine, provided you actually put it in and not just in the general vicinity.

  • SolidGrue
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    2211 months ago

    Corrals. ⛳

    I’m a Gold Jacket member of the Shopping Cart Golf Masters. I sink carts in those bitch-ass skinny Walmart corrals in one shove from 2 aisles over on the regular.

    It’s an elite league of one, but I’m enjoying my very limited notoriety.

    • @Lifecoach5000
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      211 months ago

      One my simple joys in life is thrusting one of those bad boys in super hard and yelling “YEAH SMASH EM!!”

      I get weird looks sometimes.

      • SolidGrue
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        211 months ago

        My grocery is a couple miles up the road from the county golf course. One day there was this older fella in the parking lot who was clearly stopped off after an afternoon on the links for a honey-do errand. He was a couple cars over. I hadn’t noticed him standing there watching me send one in from about 6 or 8 cars away. I threw my hands up as it slotted into a receiving cart (rare feat!) and turned around back towards my car about to WOOHOO when I catch this fella’s eye.

        With a big grin on his face, he says “Nice shot! You should join my foursome next week.” Quick chuckle, thank you, and we both get on our way. I think about that guy every time I sink one and wonder if he started doing it himself.

        • @Lifecoach5000
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          211 months ago

          Lmao that’s an awesome story. Damn I might start playing your game.

          • SolidGrue
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            211 months ago

            When you get decent at it, you start looking for the carts with the dodgy wheel, just to keep it interesting.

  • @[email protected]
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    1711 months ago

    you can’t truly be a good person unless you establish was a bad person is first. Thats why I always murder someone on the way to the corral.

  • @morphballganon
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    1711 months ago

    Any store that deserves compliance has corrals.

  • lemmyng
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    1511 months ago

    Corral, but put it there properly, not all askew as it it was a bloody kitchen drawer.

    • @surewhynotlem
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      1311 months ago

      Really? I just toss them on top. It saves floor space if you go vertical.

    • HorseChandelier
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      411 months ago

      First off - not a retail employee.

      Untidy carts in the corral, for some reason, annoy me. Even if it takes a few minutes to sort them, for size and straightness, I have to - much to the annoyance of people who are waiting for me to get back to the car.

      I guess it’s irritation at the bad people who cba to be considerate to the cart collectors. Ffs you aren’t doing someone’s job, you are making their lives a bit less shit for 30s of effort.

  • @[email protected]
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    1311 months ago

    I work retail, I occasionally have to push carts. The corral is good enough. Also frankly, even leaving the cart loose in the parking lot is better imo than the people who leave their carts inside the store right in front of the racks of carts, but don’t actually rack it up(or even face it the right way to be racked up). As soon as even one person does it, everyone does it, and I have to waste fuck loads of time just clearing the entrances of loose carts.

    • @[email protected]
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      1111 months ago

      Loose in the parking lot is bad to me because one good gust of wind can make the cart roll into a vehicle.

      • @[email protected]
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        411 months ago

        Eh, I don’t get paid enough to care about peoples cars, I just want them in the corrals so it’s easier to deal with them. I’ll of course stop a cart from hitting a car if it was my fault it was about to happen, but if the wind pushes a loose cart that’s between the car owners and god at that point. I drive a shitbox so I personally could not care less if a cart dings it.

        • @[email protected]
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          211 months ago

          It’s not your fault it’s the customers who don’t put their carts back combined with those of us who care about our cars.

  • guyrocket
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    1311 months ago

    Sometimes I go above and beyond and TAKE a cart from the parking lot into the store and use it when I arrive. Imagine if everyone did that.

      • FuglyDuck
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        811 months ago

        and take some poor kid’s job? (think of all the lessons about hard work that kid won’t learn…sheesh.)

  • Anti-Face Weapon
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    1211 months ago

    The issue, besides making minimum wage workers lives hell, is that the carts offten end up in the street, and can become a hazard or hit people’s cars. If it doesn’t have a corral, then take it to the store. Otherwise take it to the corral.