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  • No QuarterN Offline
    No QuarterN Offline
    No Quarter
    replied to dogmeat on last edited by
    #32

    @dogmeat said in Aging:

    I'm going to ramp up the angry old man stakes.

    AMERICAN SPELLINGS

    Looking at you @booboo

    Aging FFS

    Right - back to supermarkets....

    Also, people mixing up brought and bought.

    NepiaN 1 Reply Last reply
    4
  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to dogmeat on last edited by
    #33

    @dogmeat said in Aging:

    I'm going to ramp up the angry old man stakes.
    AMERICAN SPELLINGS

    Agreed! And they're quite prevalent on this side of the ditch in wannabe little USA. I'm always firing up at my coworkers about them ... that and lack of version control.

    1 Reply Last reply
    4
  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to No Quarter on last edited by
    #34

    @No-Quarter said in Aging:

    @dogmeat said in Aging:

    I'm going to ramp up the angry old man stakes.

    AMERICAN SPELLINGS

    Looking at you @booboo

    Aging FFS

    Right - back to supermarkets....

    Also, people mixing up brought and bought.

    I have a friend who hates this as well, I'm always telling him everything I 'brought' from the shops.

    P 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • BovidaeB Offline
    BovidaeB Offline
    Bovidae
    replied to dogmeat on last edited by
    #35

    @dogmeat said in Aging:

    I'm going to ramp up the angry old man stakes.

    AMERICAN SPELLINGS

    Americanisms in general. Millennials using "like" in every sentence.

    I give my 8 yr old niece plenty of shit about rolling her Rs and she lives in Auckland. The reason? Mimicking accents from American youtubers. 🙄

    No QuarterN 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    replied to Hooroo on last edited by
    #36

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Bovidae said in Aging:

    You could write a whole book about how people ignore supermarket etiquette.

    One that fuckin' annoys me is people with a trolley stopping in the middle of an aisle to have a conversation, and blocking everyone else from being able to go past them.

    12 items or less aisles! Don't you turn up with your 13th item!!!

    I have once been asked to come into the 12 items or less by the checkout operator and I told them I had 15 items and couldn't! It's a principle thing.

    Mrs Boo got taken through a 12 or less aisle when it was quiet with more than the requisite.

    If course it was then descended upon by everyone in the supermarket and she felt the full wrath of indignant people like us. Never again...

    HoorooH 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • HoorooH Offline
    HoorooH Offline
    Hooroo
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #37

    @booboo said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Bovidae said in Aging:

    You could write a whole book about how people ignore supermarket etiquette.

    One that fuckin' annoys me is people with a trolley stopping in the middle of an aisle to have a conversation, and blocking everyone else from being able to go past them.

    12 items or less aisles! Don't you turn up with your 13th item!!!

    I have once been asked to come into the 12 items or less by the checkout operator and I told them I had 15 items and couldn't! It's a principle thing.

    Mrs Boo got taken through a 12 or less aisle when it was quiet with more than the requisite.

    If course it was then descended upon by everyone in the supermarket and she felt the full wrath of indignant people like us. Never again...

    That's my fear! Getting welcomed in with my 15 items for then a large queue to form behind as I can all hear them counting my items in their mind!!

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to Hooroo on last edited by
    #38

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    Supermarket pain seems to be amplified when in the UK. At least in NZ the staff usually at least try to be helpful.

    I very quickly learned that most of the pain could be removed using an online supermarket. Lucky for us the distribution centre was not far so if you booked an early morning delivery slot 99% of the time you were first delivery and didn't have to wonder when they were turning up.
    Found I spent less as well as you don't trawl the aisles or make impulse purchases as easy. Just check and adjust your usual items and hit go.

    I couldn't believe the cost in London last year for a cart full of groceries and booze. When the price came up I exclaimed "Really?!?" and the checkout operator thought I was saying it was expensive.

    It's sooooo much cheaper than a cart full in NZ.

    really depends on what you buy and/or the quality level you are happy with. Some items I used to do a double take on how expensive they were. Some were same price in £s as $s.
    Of course there is also no such thing as seasonal pricing on fruit and veg. You pay the same all year and the supermarkets source it from cheap suppliers around the world. I tend to buy seasonally in NZ and don't waste money on buying stuff in scarce supply.
    The other thing is the availability of what would be an imported or boutique product in NZ at a high price whereby in the UK you can get it cheap e.g. fish mozzarella or real Parmesan. Then again something like a tasty cheddar is equiv of $16 for a kg block.
    Food prices in general are kept down a lot by being part of a massive EU market. One of the reasons I couldn't understand why anyone would vote Brexit. The local products are higher priced than the EU imported for sure.

    As I said, a cart of groceries, generally speaking, not specifically.

    Heaps cheaper in London than NZ.... generally

    What is a 'general' cart of groceries though?
    Buying the cheapest in the UK is cheaper than NZ, I agree. I could go to Lidl and fill a trolley full of shite for under a £100. Even buying the cheapest shite at Pak'N'Save would be well over that.
    Heaps cheaper though? Nah, not for me and I am the shopper in our house and currently working out prices etc and adjusting back to things here.

    I can't remember dammit. It was the main supermarket in Loughton 🙂 Compared to New Worlds in the Waikato.

    Even buying a large multi bone ribeye. They were a bargain in comparison.

    You must have been buying Albanian Horse! Almost equal £ for $ for steak. Just looked on Ocado and £25-£35 per kg for bone in RibEye depending on age and quality.
    New World has similar for $37

    HoorooH 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    replied to dogmeat on last edited by
    #39

    @dogmeat said in Aging:

    I'm going to ramp up the angry old man stakes.

    AMERICAN SPELLINGS

    Looking at you @booboo

    Aging FFS

    Right - back to supermarkets....

    Apologies. I'm on board with anti-Seppo spelling. A typo. I will do better next time.

    Just don't start me on apostrophes.

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #40

    Now you are all sounding like Mokey. This is meant to be a grumpy old men's thread.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • HoorooH Offline
    HoorooH Offline
    Hooroo
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #41

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    Supermarket pain seems to be amplified when in the UK. At least in NZ the staff usually at least try to be helpful.

    I very quickly learned that most of the pain could be removed using an online supermarket. Lucky for us the distribution centre was not far so if you booked an early morning delivery slot 99% of the time you were first delivery and didn't have to wonder when they were turning up.
    Found I spent less as well as you don't trawl the aisles or make impulse purchases as easy. Just check and adjust your usual items and hit go.

    I couldn't believe the cost in London last year for a cart full of groceries and booze. When the price came up I exclaimed "Really?!?" and the checkout operator thought I was saying it was expensive.

    It's sooooo much cheaper than a cart full in NZ.

    really depends on what you buy and/or the quality level you are happy with. Some items I used to do a double take on how expensive they were. Some were same price in £s as $s.
    Of course there is also no such thing as seasonal pricing on fruit and veg. You pay the same all year and the supermarkets source it from cheap suppliers around the world. I tend to buy seasonally in NZ and don't waste money on buying stuff in scarce supply.
    The other thing is the availability of what would be an imported or boutique product in NZ at a high price whereby in the UK you can get it cheap e.g. fish mozzarella or real Parmesan. Then again something like a tasty cheddar is equiv of $16 for a kg block.
    Food prices in general are kept down a lot by being part of a massive EU market. One of the reasons I couldn't understand why anyone would vote Brexit. The local products are higher priced than the EU imported for sure.

    As I said, a cart of groceries, generally speaking, not specifically.

    Heaps cheaper in London than NZ.... generally

    What is a 'general' cart of groceries though?
    Buying the cheapest in the UK is cheaper than NZ, I agree. I could go to Lidl and fill a trolley full of shite for under a £100. Even buying the cheapest shite at Pak'N'Save would be well over that.
    Heaps cheaper though? Nah, not for me and I am the shopper in our house and currently working out prices etc and adjusting back to things here.

    I can't remember dammit. It was the main supermarket in Loughton 🙂 Compared to New Worlds in the Waikato.

    Even buying a large multi bone ribeye. They were a bargain in comparison.

    You must have been buying Albanian Horse! Almost equal £ for $ for steak. Just looked on Ocado and £25-£35 per kg for bone in RibEye depending on age and quality.
    New World has similar for $37

    Weird. How times change in a year. (Or maybe it was the season?)

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • JCJ Offline
    JCJ Offline
    JC
    replied to Hooroo on last edited by
    #42

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    Supermarket pain seems to be amplified when in the UK. At least in NZ the staff usually at least try to be helpful.

    I very quickly learned that most of the pain could be removed using an online supermarket. Lucky for us the distribution centre was not far so if you booked an early morning delivery slot 99% of the time you were first delivery and didn't have to wonder when they were turning up.
    Found I spent less as well as you don't trawl the aisles or make impulse purchases as easy. Just check and adjust your usual items and hit go.

    I couldn't believe the cost in London last year for a cart full of groceries and booze. When the price came up I exclaimed "Really?!?" and the checkout operator thought I was saying it was expensive.

    It's sooooo much cheaper than a cart full in NZ.

    really depends on what you buy and/or the quality level you are happy with. Some items I used to do a double take on how expensive they were. Some were same price in £s as $s.
    Of course there is also no such thing as seasonal pricing on fruit and veg. You pay the same all year and the supermarkets source it from cheap suppliers around the world. I tend to buy seasonally in NZ and don't waste money on buying stuff in scarce supply.
    The other thing is the availability of what would be an imported or boutique product in NZ at a high price whereby in the UK you can get it cheap e.g. fish mozzarella or real Parmesan. Then again something like a tasty cheddar is equiv of $16 for a kg block.
    Food prices in general are kept down a lot by being part of a massive EU market. One of the reasons I couldn't understand why anyone would vote Brexit. The local products are higher priced than the EU imported for sure.

    As I said, a cart of groceries, generally speaking, not specifically.

    Heaps cheaper in London than NZ.... generally

    What is a 'general' cart of groceries though?
    Buying the cheapest in the UK is cheaper than NZ, I agree. I could go to Lidl and fill a trolley full of shite for under a £100. Even buying the cheapest shite at Pak'N'Save would be well over that.
    Heaps cheaper though? Nah, not for me and I am the shopper in our house and currently working out prices etc and adjusting back to things here.

    I can't remember dammit. It was the main supermarket in Loughton 🙂 Compared to New Worlds in the Waikato.

    Even buying a large multi bone ribeye. They were a bargain in comparison.

    If it's the one down beside the station that's a Sainsburys. Hardly ever went there myself - Waitrose in South Woodford for me even if it was more expensive. The nearest to my London place is a Tesco Metro which is just dire. It is the exemplar for every type of bad experience mariner mentioned. Mind you in many parts of the UK people are old and decrepit by 50.

    HoorooH 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • HoorooH Offline
    HoorooH Offline
    Hooroo
    replied to JC on last edited by
    #43

    @JC said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    Supermarket pain seems to be amplified when in the UK. At least in NZ the staff usually at least try to be helpful.

    I very quickly learned that most of the pain could be removed using an online supermarket. Lucky for us the distribution centre was not far so if you booked an early morning delivery slot 99% of the time you were first delivery and didn't have to wonder when they were turning up.
    Found I spent less as well as you don't trawl the aisles or make impulse purchases as easy. Just check and adjust your usual items and hit go.

    I couldn't believe the cost in London last year for a cart full of groceries and booze. When the price came up I exclaimed "Really?!?" and the checkout operator thought I was saying it was expensive.

    It's sooooo much cheaper than a cart full in NZ.

    really depends on what you buy and/or the quality level you are happy with. Some items I used to do a double take on how expensive they were. Some were same price in £s as $s.
    Of course there is also no such thing as seasonal pricing on fruit and veg. You pay the same all year and the supermarkets source it from cheap suppliers around the world. I tend to buy seasonally in NZ and don't waste money on buying stuff in scarce supply.
    The other thing is the availability of what would be an imported or boutique product in NZ at a high price whereby in the UK you can get it cheap e.g. fish mozzarella or real Parmesan. Then again something like a tasty cheddar is equiv of $16 for a kg block.
    Food prices in general are kept down a lot by being part of a massive EU market. One of the reasons I couldn't understand why anyone would vote Brexit. The local products are higher priced than the EU imported for sure.

    As I said, a cart of groceries, generally speaking, not specifically.

    Heaps cheaper in London than NZ.... generally

    What is a 'general' cart of groceries though?
    Buying the cheapest in the UK is cheaper than NZ, I agree. I could go to Lidl and fill a trolley full of shite for under a £100. Even buying the cheapest shite at Pak'N'Save would be well over that.
    Heaps cheaper though? Nah, not for me and I am the shopper in our house and currently working out prices etc and adjusting back to things here.

    I can't remember dammit. It was the main supermarket in Loughton 🙂 Compared to New Worlds in the Waikato.

    Even buying a large multi bone ribeye. They were a bargain in comparison.

    If it's the one down beside the station that's a Sainsburys. Hardly ever went there myself - Waitrose in South Woodford for me even if it was more expensive. The nearest to my London place is a Tesco Metro which is just dire. It is the exemplar for every type of bad experience mariner mentioned. Mind you in many parts of the UK people are old and decrepit by 50.

    It was the one in the middle of town opposite Pizza Express(It was only July last year so I am stuffed why I can't remember it... must be an age thing....)

    taniwharugbyT CrucialC 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to Hooroo on last edited by
    #44

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    must be an age thing

    you are in the right thread then!!

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    wrote on last edited by
    #45

    we moved from grumpy to alzheimers very quickly

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to Hooroo on last edited by
    #46

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @JC said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    @Hooroo said in Aging:

    @Crucial said in Aging:

    Supermarket pain seems to be amplified when in the UK. At least in NZ the staff usually at least try to be helpful.

    I very quickly learned that most of the pain could be removed using an online supermarket. Lucky for us the distribution centre was not far so if you booked an early morning delivery slot 99% of the time you were first delivery and didn't have to wonder when they were turning up.
    Found I spent less as well as you don't trawl the aisles or make impulse purchases as easy. Just check and adjust your usual items and hit go.

    I couldn't believe the cost in London last year for a cart full of groceries and booze. When the price came up I exclaimed "Really?!?" and the checkout operator thought I was saying it was expensive.

    It's sooooo much cheaper than a cart full in NZ.

    really depends on what you buy and/or the quality level you are happy with. Some items I used to do a double take on how expensive they were. Some were same price in £s as $s.
    Of course there is also no such thing as seasonal pricing on fruit and veg. You pay the same all year and the supermarkets source it from cheap suppliers around the world. I tend to buy seasonally in NZ and don't waste money on buying stuff in scarce supply.
    The other thing is the availability of what would be an imported or boutique product in NZ at a high price whereby in the UK you can get it cheap e.g. fish mozzarella or real Parmesan. Then again something like a tasty cheddar is equiv of $16 for a kg block.
    Food prices in general are kept down a lot by being part of a massive EU market. One of the reasons I couldn't understand why anyone would vote Brexit. The local products are higher priced than the EU imported for sure.

    As I said, a cart of groceries, generally speaking, not specifically.

    Heaps cheaper in London than NZ.... generally

    What is a 'general' cart of groceries though?
    Buying the cheapest in the UK is cheaper than NZ, I agree. I could go to Lidl and fill a trolley full of shite for under a £100. Even buying the cheapest shite at Pak'N'Save would be well over that.
    Heaps cheaper though? Nah, not for me and I am the shopper in our house and currently working out prices etc and adjusting back to things here.

    I can't remember dammit. It was the main supermarket in Loughton 🙂 Compared to New Worlds in the Waikato.

    Even buying a large multi bone ribeye. They were a bargain in comparison.

    If it's the one down beside the station that's a Sainsburys. Hardly ever went there myself - Waitrose in South Woodford for me even if it was more expensive. The nearest to my London place is a Tesco Metro which is just dire. It is the exemplar for every type of bad experience mariner mentioned. Mind you in many parts of the UK people are old and decrepit by 50.

    It was the one in the middle of town opposite Pizza Express(It was only July last year so I am stuffed why I can't remember it... must be an age thing....)

    Looks like it was a Morrisons. The supermarket of desperation.

    We might not be comparing the same thing though. They are the type of place they would sell a cheap beef roast of forerib.

    JCJ taniwharugbyT 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • JCJ Offline
    JCJ Offline
    JC
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #47

    @Crucial Yeah, That's a Morrisons. I've never darkened its door. @Hooroo is dead to me.

    HoorooH 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • No QuarterN Offline
    No QuarterN Offline
    No Quarter
    replied to Bovidae on last edited by
    #48

    @Bovidae said in Aging:

    @dogmeat said in Aging:

    I'm going to ramp up the angry old man stakes.

    AMERICAN SPELLINGS

    Americanisms in general. Millennials using "like" in every sentence.

    I give my 8 yr old niece plenty of shit about rolling her Rs and she lives in Auckland. The reason? Mimicking accents from American youtubers. 🙄

    My 6 year old boy starting misusing the world 'literally' the past couple of weeks. I've come down hard on him over that, he sounds like a fucking Kardashian.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #49

    @Crucial and that is the part of it, in NZ, Pak'n'Save is your 'cheaper' option, but they arent significantly cheaper, unlike the UK, where you have Morrisons, Iceland (is that still a thing?) Aldies, ASDA, Cocso etc

    No QuarterN 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • No QuarterN Offline
    No QuarterN Offline
    No Quarter
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #50

    @taniwharugby said in Aging:

    @Crucial and that is the part of it, in NZ, Pak'n'Save is your 'cheaper' option, but they arent significantly cheaper, unlike the UK, where you have Morrisons, Iceland (is that still a thing?) Aldies, ASDA, Cocso etc

    Not all Pak N Saves are equal. E.G. in Auckland I found Mt Albert to be significantly cheaper than Sylvia Park.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • HoorooH Offline
    HoorooH Offline
    Hooroo
    replied to JC on last edited by
    #51

    @JC said in Aging:

    @Crucial Yeah, That's a Morrisons. I've never darkened its door. @Hooroo is dead to me.

    Is that better or worse the Lidl/Iceland?? On Par?

    It was the only one I noticed until I actually walked to the station.

    My Bro lives near there. Quite a cool little area that I was unaware of when I lived in Chislehurst

    JCJ 1 Reply Last reply
    0

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