I am a guy. I do the shopping for my family. I have noticed that when I shop early on a weekend morning at the grocery stores in my area, the other shoppers are disproptionately guys - much more so vs. other times of day or week.
Is that a Thing? i.e., do you see this in your neck of the woods?
I do my shopping at the same time (I’m a woman), and it’s generally just me and the old folks.
Con: they are really slow and like to block aisles
Pro: the store is empty enough that it’s easier to dart around them
Con.2: there are very few checkouts open at that time and it’s guaranteed that if I get in line behind one of them they’re going to pay by check. Excruciatingly slowly.
I do my shopping around 9 PM on weeknights. The store is dead. Weekends are a zoo no matter what time of day it is. Weekday mornings are full of slow, doddering old people.
Not around here: not too many old folks in the early morning. If I can get in Saturday morning about the time they open I can be out in about five minutes, ten minutes maximum. Weekend mornings are also better for me because of my weekday work schedule (many stores close at 9:00pm).
Weekend mid-day is the worst, when all the slow-witted people are generally just getting in the way, as well as those people who enjoy shopping, (and so drag it out as long as possible,) selfishly assuming that the rest of the world does, too.
It has nothing to do with being a man–it’s about being busy.
67 year old male who does the household shopping (because I’m retired and my wife is still working) checking in.
I tend to do my shopping early in the afternoon (after my gym session). The mix at that time appears to be 50-50. My biggest gripe is that the magazine racks are filled with female stuff. You’d think they could put just one copy of Sports Illustrated in the racks for us guys…
3:00 pm is good for me. The office workers have gone back to work and the mums who have to pick up their kids have left. It’s usually pretty quiet about then.
I try to go before noon on Sunday. It’s not too crowded - I guess most people are at church then. But it seems to be a fairly random mix of shoppers.
The downside is, that’s when the store decides to stock the shelves, so I have to navigate around all that. They’re open 24 hours - I can’t figure out why they don’t have a crew come in overnight to do that.
If it’s anything like my store, it’s because late at night is when all the families with bunches of pre-school-age kids show up to do their shopping for some reason, right along with the people who know their food stamp cards get loaded exactly at 12:38 AM and they can’t wait a single minute later than that to get their shopping for the month done, and the people who waited until half an hour before alcohol sales cut off to decide they need to restock the liquor cabinet.
These days I go in at about 6 a.m. I’m temporarily disabled, and that’s when the motorized carts are available and freshly charged. Not many people in the store except employees restocking the shelves. Not even other old people. But there’s maybe one register open, and it’s manned by a crotchety middle-aged white woman, who reminds me not to take the cart out to my car. I don’t have a choice, so I do . . . then return it to the store. Shopping at any other time would be a disaster.
Tough to say, I don’t really pay attention to the people at the store other than deciding if there are many or few.
During the week I try to go immediately after work. At that time it’s good, not great, from a numbers perspective. I believe most of my co-shoppers are women at that time, but I could be wrong.
On the weekends, son #1 and I get there between 6:30-7:00AM. At that point we’re usually the only people in the store who aren’t employees. Getting there before seven is CRITICAL, since it greatly increases the chance we get the fire-truck cart, so we don’t have to settle for the lowly cop-car cart or the race-car carts with flames. Those carts are shit, apparently. Invariably, someone in produce says “You guys get up early!” and I’m like yeah dude, one of us is two.
I’ve seen one or two people paying at the supermarket (here in Chicago) with checks this year.
Mind you, I recall some European Dopers being puzzled by the persistence of checks/cheques in the U.S., so maybe that explains the difference?
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These people need to die.
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Ending checks (that is, having banks stop issuing checkbooks and processing checks) would be a less … drastic solution. Some people will keep doing what they’ve always done as long as they are accommodated, but most manage to adjust when they have to.