I do not understand why people aren’t satisfied with the uppermost (open) case of whatever when there’s a large stack (and, let’s face it–everything is stacked at Costco). I watch them struggle to lift 4 or 5 cases so they can pick one box of raisins from the 5th level down. I get if there was one left on top that was crushed or some other moron opened…but, really?

The other one is the family of 5 that walk next to each other (think front line of an NFL team) while pushing the cart as slowly as possible down the ‘wrong’ side of the aisle.

  • RalphWiggum@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    1 year ago

    People who line up for samples and block spaces.

    People who just leave their carts in the isle and walk off.

    People who stand in the middle of the way and debate/converse if they actually need the item.

    I can keep going.

    • Gastrocnemo@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      11 months ago

      Genuinely curious about why leaving a cart in an aisle and walking off is considered a faux pas.

      I typically leave my cart in a less congested aisle to go and get items in another aisle while leaving it butted up next to some items in a way that keeps the aisle free and allows people to get to whatever it’s parked next to.

      How is this seen as an inconvenience?