Woodmans
Woodmans is a large grocery store
which has several locations. Our Woodmans is located on the southwest side of
Madison. Woodmans is a grocery store where you will find a number of
state employees shopping for food. In the Madison grocery store ranks,
Woodmans fits into the budget of most state employees.
Before retirement, my wife had me
tag along while she occasionally shopped after I returned from work. Now
at retirement, I am allowed to accompany her during the day for these shopping
adventures.
Shopping at Woodmans is an
experience each time you shop at Woodmans. There are two types of people
that shop at Woodmans -- those that know what they are doing and those that do
not. The clueless people walk around not knowing where anything is
located and are in danger of being trampled by people who do.
My wife knows what she is doing at
Woodmans. She compiles a shopping list each week and then organizes the
items on her list by the grocery aisle which houses each item. Milk is
never the first item on her list. The first item is always bread or a
bread product. She has shopped Woodmans so much she automatically knows
which aisle the product is located in. She gets incensed when Woodmans
changes the aisle locations or she makes a mistake, misses an item, and then
causes her to retrace her steps to corral the missing box of cereal, can of
tomatoes, etc.
Me, on the other hand, are one of
the those that do not know what they are doing. My role is to push the
shopping cart and try to keep up with my wife in sight. It is work
to keep up because she tries to limit the amount of time in the store as
much as possible and the outlay of the store is better when you are on foot
rather than pushing a shopping cart.
Trailing her with the shopping cart
is not easy. The first obstacle is the produce section.
Woodmans has a lot of produce but not much area to maneuver. Each time I
approach the produce section with the shopping cart I shudder. I know I
will fall far behind my wife if anyone is talking with an acquaintance, the
friendly Woodmans people are restocking, or if someone dumps produce on the
floor. All of these potential roadblocks occur and when they occur
simultaneously waiting on the Madison Beltline in a traffic jam is preferable
than trying to sort out the mess in the produce area.
If you survive the produce area
then there are other hurtles to overcome. People love to park their
shopping carts in the middle of the food aisle. By doing that they ensure
shoppers from either direction cannot pass. These people stand to the side of
their shopping cart scratching their heads, discussing what can is needed while
talking to their spouse on their cellphone, or yelling at their kid strapped
into the shopping cart which decided to cry because the kid had an
audience The shoppers from either side try to be polite by clearing
their throats, talking loud, smiling, or trying to move the impeding shopping
cart out of the way. Sometimes the delayed shopper's gambits work and
sometimes they don't. As for my experience, the delayed shopper
strategies never work and so I am constantly trying to either find my wife
because she is now in a different aisle or sprinting after her trying to keep
up.
Woodmans also has a silent
obstacle. Woodmans has a cadre of electric shopping carts. From my
observation most of the people driving these silent killers do not need
them. They should walk like everyone else. But I must admit an
electric shopping cart looks like a lot more fun than pushing a manual
cart. The challenge for us manual cart people is you never know when an
89 year old grandmother will whiz past you on her electric shopping cart.
Getting passed in an aisle by an electric shopping cart is a sobering and
humiliating experience.
If you get past the milk, ice
cream, and pop aisles in Woodmans then you are close to Nirvana, the checkout
lines. There is a strategy to getting through the checkout lines.
You must conduct reconnaissance on each checkout line and assess the
checker and the bagger. If either of these two people are slow in what they do,
you move to the next line. I also discovered another Woodmans'
rule. The shortest checkout line may be longest checkout line because the
machinery will break down or the person before you forgot something in the back
of the store that they need to get before checking out. This rule
is the equivalent of the laws of gravity because it is always true.
I learned a lot while experiencing
the Woodmans' experience during the daytime. One of these days my wife
said I may be allowed to go solo. I am not looking forward to that
day. However, if that day occurs then I know the Woodmans' Liquor Store
is the next store in the shopping center. I will then plan to visit that
store for liquid assistance before I try to get past the produce section in the
main store.
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