I don’t mean just returning your shopping cart to the cart area, but actually sliding it back in. At my grocery store, some people half ass stack it back in or don’t at all. This drives me nuts because when I come to return my cart I have to fix the mess before I can return mine. Plus, I don’t want the workers who collect the carts to do any more work than they already do.

I caught this one guy who was returning his cart and I had to wait until he was done. Instead of stacking his cart, he just left it there in front of the stack and I said, “C’mon man!” He was surprised and said, “Oh!” then immediately stacked his cart.

    • Apytele@sh.itjust.works
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      7 days ago

      Years ago when I first bought one of those multitool hairclips it mentioned it could be used as a trolley coin and I had to look that up. I discovered that in a lot of European countries it’s customary for carts to be locked together with a lock that takes a coin to unlock then returns the coin if you correctly return and nest the cart. Now, it does take a decently curated social milieu to design systems that promote prosocial behavior. That said, that particular prosocial behavior not only had to be mechanically encouraged, but has also led to the development of something called a “trolley coin” to circumvent the mechanism for people who are diametrically opposed to that prosocial behavior.

      • kjetil@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        In Norway, the trolley coined gained popularity as society went mostly cashless, yet the trolleys demanded their token. An earlier factor was that it was annoying to make sure you always had a coin of the correct denomination (physical size). Trolley coins can be part of your keychain, or won’t be accidentally used to buy a newspaper before going to the grocery store.

        Most people still return the trolley and slide it in, like civilized humans should

      • WIZARD POPE💫@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Tbh I think the plastic coins came around more as a convenience. If you have one in your wallet you always have the option of taking the trolley. You might not always have coins or the right sized coins. At least I know I don’t have any coins most of the time.

  • Obinice@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Yes, it is common courtesy to return your trolley appropriately.

    I’ve only really seen the system abused when visiting countries like the USA, shoppers seem feral over there.

    • Pat_Riot@lemmy.today
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      7 days ago

      Some stores seem to have removed about half of icart returns. My Costco barely has any, same at the two Walmarts in town. The Costco is only a couple of years old, so its parking lot was designed without them. Cart gets pushed up on the median. Both Walmarts actually took them out. The store is who broke the social contract. At least it gives some employee a chance to walk around outside for a while.

        • Pat_Riot@lemmy.today
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          7 days ago

          The Walmarts just seem to have not replaced their cart corrals over the years. The ones they still have are bent from being hit.

          Costco really seems to have been intentional. The parking spaces are wider than average so even if there are cars parked already on either side of me, that I can easily back out and use any cart left there. The medians between parking rows are full of rocks with no walkway.

    • Kevo@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      As an American, it’s my god given right to be shitty and make the lives of children and underprivileged and/or retired people as terrible as possible to make myself feel good. As the founding fathers intended.

  • CorrectAlias@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    6 days ago

    I fucking hate it when people don’t return their carts, and yes I always slide them in and condence the stack as much as possible. I used to have to do carts while working retail, and I would have to pick up so many carts that people just left on the curb or even in parking stalls. Some of them wouldn’t even return them when right next to the corral, and instead just block an entire parking stall.

    The worst was working carts in the 100°F+ heat. I had to take breaks every 15 minutes or so just to avoid heat stroke, and while resting I would see these people just leaving carts in the places I had just cleaned up. Infuriating.

  • Theoriginalthon@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Story time: in the mid 90s an IKEA store opened near by, the trolleys required a £1 coin, people would just either forget about the £1 as no where else was doing it at the time, or just think I can’t be arsed taking the trolley back. Cue teenage me, every time we went to IKEA I would come out of the carpark with between £10-£15 before my parents demanded I get in the car. It then evolved in to people connecting multiple trolley so only one person lost a £1, eventually they had a guy in vehicle and trailer pick them up after removing the coin lock from all the trolleys.

  • JadenSmith@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    I always slide the cart in. It’s rather satisfying when it slides and chucks against the cart in front, sort of like an acknowledgement of the attachment.

    I believe I desperately need some new hobbies, on a side note.

  • Routhinator@startrek.website
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    7 days ago

    Yes its common courtesy. Its lazy and disrespectful to just toss your cart however and just expect that the store’s minimum paid staff should deal with your mess

    I usually organise them when I bring mine back to fix other people’s laziness.

  • canihasaccount@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    As someone who worked at more than one grocery store where the manager scheduled more people per week if someone needed to constantly be on cart duty (e.g., during the winter, because folks were less likely to put their carts back during the cold), I often don’t put my cart back in the correct spot. I do so because at the stores I worked at, that would help people who want more hours be able to make a case for those hours to the manager. I often had to do so when I wanted more hours, and I was the person who did the carts. I never do this when cart duty is otherwise hard (e.g., late at night, in the cold, in the summer heat, etc.)—in those cases, I always bring my cart back inside of the store and put it completely away.

    So, yes, but there are sometimes reasons to do something besides what’s courteous.

  • Mostly_Gristle@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I think if you’re going to go through the trouble to return your cart to the cart area then yeah, slot that bad boy into the stack the way it’s supposed to go. Otherwise it’s like those people who pick up their dog’s poop and just hang the bag on a tree branch for someone else to put in the trash. Either do the thing, or don’t do the thing. Doing it halfway just makes a different kind of mess.

    I found out a new (new to me at least) bit of cart-return etiquette last year when I was using the handicap parking spaces for a couple months following ankle surgery. Grocery carts double as walking aids for a lot of people with mobility issues while they’re at the store. Many people with those issues will purposely leave their carts in the handicap area as a courtesy for the next person with mobility issues so they can have it right away and not have to struggle all the way to the cart area. So there’s at least one instance where not returning your cart doesn’t make you a horrible person.

  • baggachipz@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    It’s annoying when people don’t stack them in the corrall, but the people who just hook the front wheels over the curb where they parked are literally Hitler. They can’t be bothered to even make it to the cart corral, and take effort to push the wheels up. They deserve untold pain.

    • Pat_Riot@lemmy.today
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      7 days ago

      My Costco has one corral in like 6 lanes. Nah, fam. Do you have any idea how fucking big that parking lot is? Conversely, there is frequently a cart waiting at my parking spot when I find it. I use it and then leave it for the next person to park there. Efficient!

  • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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    7 days ago

    The only time I don’t return the cart to the corral is when I’m taking my elderly mother to the store, and we park in the handicapped spots. I always leave my cart near there, because older, handicapped people often like to grab a cart in the lot, and use it like a walker to get to the store.

    Likewise, when we arrive, I jump out and grab the nearest cart as she’s getting out of the car, and I can wheel it over to her. It’s nice when someone has left a cart in the handicapped zone.

    This is a handicapped thing, you have to be part of that world to know about it.

  • solarvector@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 days ago

    Common social courtesy, but…

    Last time this was posted there was someone arguing that we were all basically brainwashed by social pressure into doing free labor for shitty corporations.

    I think they’re probably right but I still return the cart, just like I still tip at restaurants.

      • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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        7 days ago

        Corporations steal from us all the time, we should take back. I’d love to live in a world where less jobs is a good thing for humanity, but we live in a world where it’s a bad thing. Fuck capitalism.

  • saimen@feddit.org
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    7 days ago

    I actually prefer not to stack it completely but just put in the beginning of the lane (which are separated by metal bars) so the next person doesn’t have to go all inside the lane to take their cart (they can be several meters). It’s still tidy in its lane and the next person bringing back a cart can just push mine forward with theirs.