I went for a little post-Christmas shopping to day, to see whether they had any interesting Christmas sweets on sale. Boy, was it full! I suppose I committed the triple sin of (a) going on a Saturday around noon, (b) shortly after Christmas and (c) on the first day that fireworks can legally be sold around here.
And when I wanted to bring my shopping cart back, there was no other cart to attach it to, so I couldn't get my little plastic chip back. I was the first person this happened to (just before, an employee there had taken away the last shopping cart) and slowly, a queue of people with carts started to form. Unfortunately, nearly all had chips rather than coins in the carts, so people who wanted a cart were out of luck since they couldn't just give the person a €1 or 50¢ coin in exchange for the one in the cart. Finally, an employee came around with a little metal thing which would unlock the coin.
And when I wanted to bring my shopping cart back, there was no other cart to attach it to, so I couldn't get my little plastic chip back. I was the first person this happened to (just before, an employee there had taken away the last shopping cart) and slowly, a queue of people with carts started to form. Unfortunately, nearly all had chips rather than coins in the carts, so people who wanted a cart were out of luck since they couldn't just give the person a €1 or 50¢ coin in exchange for the one in the cart. Finally, an employee came around with a little metal thing which would unlock the coin.
no subject
Date: Saturday, 28 December 2002 07:42 (UTC)For €1, though, I'd probably wait around. Which I guess is the point.
no subject
Date: Saturday, 28 December 2002 08:10 (UTC)Yup, I expected those, too (pretty much all other supermarkets have them). But the chains at the end were missing the vital little piece that plugs into the shopping carts.
For €1, though, I'd probably wait around.
Another problem was that not everyone had €1 pieces -- it used to be DM 1 nearly universally. Then when they switched to euros, most carts took either DM 1, €0.50 or €1 pieces, and a bunch of people still use mark pieces for their shopping carts (I used to do so for quite a while as well, out of nostalgia, but I can't find mine at the moment -- I think it's on my bedside table somewhere).
So even if you have a coin, you're not guaranteed it'll match what the previous "owner" put in it. Maybe that's part of what contributes to the rising use of tokens (which are still usually mark-sized rather than the same size as the €0.50 or €1 pieces, which are similar but not identical).
Re:
Date: Saturday, 28 December 2002 08:17 (UTC)How does it work with different-sized coins? I'd think that would be hard. Here the slots are only one size.
no subject
Date: Saturday, 28 December 2002 10:16 (UTC)So maybe they had to enlarge the round spaces just a little to accommodate €0.50 coins. I suppose they did it so that people wouldn't have to pay twice as much as they did previously, even if they do get the coin back usually.
Free tokens
Date: Saturday, 28 December 2002 10:21 (UTC)When I was young, I think everyone used mark coins, then slowly tokens started coming out; either metal (optionally with a hole for attaching to a keychain) or plastic (I have one of those). And all the ones I saw cost exactly DM 1. (I wonder what they sell for now -- €0.51, the equivalent, or maybe €0.50?)