Coronavirus prep

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Replies

  • Katmary71
    Katmary71 Posts: 7,080 Member
    Walmart isn't delivering or allowing any advance choice, of future delivery dates & my local grocery store's time slots're sold out, through March 22nd.

    @DecadeDuchess I placed an order today and there wasn't any information about this, it was Walmart.com not the grocery though. Is it the same with Walmart.com? I have some stuff like cat litter I'll really need next week so if it's true for walmart.com then I'll need to brave the stores.
  • cmhubbard92
    cmhubbard92 Posts: 5,064 Member
    Katmary71 wrote: »
    Walmart isn't delivering or allowing any advance choice, of future delivery dates & my local grocery store's time slots're sold out, through March 22nd.

    @DecadeDuchess I placed an order today and there wasn't any information about this, it was Walmart.com not the grocery though. Is it the same with Walmart.com? I have some stuff like cat litter I'll really need next week so if it's true for walmart.com then I'll need to brave the stores.

    I ordered some quarantine(and regular day-to-day) chocolates on Amazon. Prime delivery should have been yesterday, but due to the intense overload of orders, the earliest I can get my order will be Thursday. I'm not worried, but it just shows how much of an overload the "system" is having due to grocery stores selling out of certain things, or people fearing going out.
  • rheddmobile
    rheddmobile Posts: 6,840 Member
    Katmary71 wrote: »
    Walmart isn't delivering or allowing any advance choice, of future delivery dates & my local grocery store's time slots're sold out, through March 22nd.

    @DecadeDuchess I placed an order today and there wasn't any information about this, it was Walmart.com not the grocery though. Is it the same with Walmart.com? I have some stuff like cat litter I'll really need next week so if it's true for walmart.com then I'll need to brave the stores.

    I ordered some quarantine(and regular day-to-day) chocolates on Amazon. Prime delivery should have been yesterday, but due to the intense overload of orders, the earliest I can get my order will be Thursday. I'm not worried, but it just shows how much of an overload the "system" is having due to grocery stores selling out of certain things, or people fearing going out.

    Shoot. I ordered cat food on Sunday from Amazon since there was none available here. It said at the time it was in stock and would be here Prime aka Tuesday, but now it says it hasn’t even shipped yet and will be here Thursday. It also says it’s sold out and will be available in one to two days if you go to buy it. I wonder if it exists or if I just won’t get it.
  • Nony_Mouse
    Nony_Mouse Posts: 5,646 Member
    Lillymoo01 wrote: »
    Nony_Mouse wrote: »
    It should have been fairly obvious that collection and delivery services for grocery stores would be in hot demand. Just one of the reasons why people in this thread have been saying for the past two weeks that ensuring you have at least two weeks' food supply is a sensible thing to do (if you are able to do that financially, etc). Because yeah, you're probably not going to get same or even next day delivery at this point.

    It beggars belief that some people still seem to have been taken by surprise.

    If you're running low on food and unable or unwilling to go to the supermarket, put an order in. Now.

    I am all set for self-isolation except for not having fresh fruit and vegetables for a period of time will be hard, especially when I eat around 10 serves of the stuff a day.

    Yup. I haven't solved how to get around that (other than food delivery) yet if the need arises. Though, in my little town, going to the supermarket at 9.30 in the evening pretty much guarantees you have the place to yourself. Use self checkout, contactless payment (though emails from both supermarkets today say they are putting more sanitiser wipes and gel around the stores). Done.
  • DecadeDuchess
    DecadeDuchess Posts: 315 Member
    edited March 2020
    I am not understanding all of those that're supposedly taken this seriously, yet plan to and/or already're doing outdoor activities. If we were to pass by each other upon a hiking trail, it's like passing by each other anywhere else needlessly. Actually it'd most likely be worse, due to our heavy breathing via exercise exertion. Than just casually walking via 1 room to another within a climate controlled environment, where our breathing intensity'd remain normal.

    It's the outdoors. Can't people give each six feet (or 20 feet) berth?
    I am not understanding all of those that're supposedly taken this seriously, yet plan to and/or already're doing outdoor activities. If we were to pass by each other upon a hiking trail, it's like passing by each other anywhere else needlessly. Actually it'd most likely be worse, due to our heavy breathing via exercise exertion. Than just casually walking via 1 room to another within a climate controlled environment, where our breathing intensity'd remain normal.

    You need to keep a 4 ft--1 meter distance. Zigzag if you meet someone.
    amtyrell wrote: »
    I am not understanding all of those that're supposedly taken this seriously, yet plan to and/or already're doing outdoor activities. If we were to pass by each other upon a hiking trail, it's like passing by each other anywhere else needlessly. Actually it'd most likely be worse, due to our heavy breathing via exercise exertion. Than just casually walking via 1 room to another within a climate controlled environment, where our breathing intensity'd remain normal.

    Well my garden is on my own property and nobody else lives here.
    Hiking if you see someone then stepping off the trail a 6 to 10 feet is absolutely a possibility near me.
    Biking you quickly pass and you can do so at that6 ft distance.
    Getting outside is good for mental health, vitamin d levels, and overall health but yes a big passing space.

    For example Mount Everest's vast, yet there're trails where traffic jams form. If you take all of the regulars, that use a hiking trail & now mix the people that're unable to go to their gym they'll most likely be congestion of people, where which maintaining a reasonable distance between them might be implausible. Otherwise, it depends.


    I am not understanding all of those that're supposedly taken this seriously, yet plan to and/or already're doing outdoor activities. If we were to pass by each other upon a hiking trail, it's like passing by each other anywhere else needlessly. Actually it'd most likely be worse, due to our heavy breathing via exercise exertion. Than just casually walking via 1 room to another within a climate controlled environment, where our breathing intensity'd remain normal.

    I can spend an hour or two at the Nordic ski area, and pass the few people I see with 6 feet of space, in a couple seconds. It's true the virus doesn't know where you are, the difference though is you pass by so many more people at the grocery store, and spend more time in the presence of strangers. You have to go to the store at least occasionally, you can't stockpile 2 months worth of milk, it'll go bad.

    The difference being's that, grocery shopping's necessary but otherwise, I agree.
  • DecadeDuchess
    DecadeDuchess Posts: 315 Member
    Katmary71 wrote: »
    Walmart isn't delivering or allowing any advance choice, of future delivery dates & my local grocery store's time slots're sold out, through March 22nd.

    @DecadeDuchess I placed an order today and there wasn't any information about this, it was Walmart.com not the grocery though. Is it the same with Walmart.com? I have some stuff like cat litter I'll really need next week so if it's true for walmart.com then I'll need to brave the stores.

    I meant: Walmart Grocery. I know that with Walmart, next day delivery was unavailable.