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To have been stressed out by Aldi
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Just done a food shop at Aldi to save some money. It stressed me out. There was trolleys and pallets all over the place. At one point there was a backlog of people with trolleys who couldn't get down an isle. The food seemed to be stored in such a random way that I was back and forth. Then oh my god at the checkout he threw the food at me and it took 20 minutes to distress and sort my trolley out.
I cannot do that every week. AIBU?
I bought Blackforest stollen in there yesterday. How can a shop which sells such a thing, possibly be bad?
OP, the good thing about Aldi is that they don't fuck with the layout, so once you learn where everything is, it tends to stay there, so shopping is easier.
The other thing you can do is get an old lady style wheely shopping trolley - fill it as you're going round, organise your shopping on the conveyer belt so tins go first, eggs go last, and then as it goes through the til just scoop things straight into your trolley.
I love lidl and aldi. I am generally clumsy and awkward in day to day life anyway, but I cope fine with the checkout system there. If it annoyed me enough that I felt upset or angry enough to get into an online ruck about it, I would just shop somewhere else I guess.
Once you get the hang of Aldi it's bloody brilliant.
That sounds like a good idea, Sam.
I wasn't actually aware there was a 'system' I was mucking up for everyone else, btw - maybe they ought to have a sign up saying trolleys are compulsory unless you want all your stuff to fall on the floor.
The checkout system at Aldi can be an 'experience' if you are not used to it. I agree with other posters, put the large, heavy stuff first, then if you can load the travellator in a fashion eg fruit and veg, heavy stuff first then grapes and tomatoes last, same with fridge stuff etc. Pop a few big bags open in the trolley and then go for it.
It isn't Tescos, Sainsburys where you able to pack eveything neatly, in order in your bags but you do get used to it. I pop my card in my pocket after I have loaded the shopping so it is ready to pay. DH gets constant 'hurry ups' growled at him, then he tidies the bags while I pay.
We are in and out in 30minutes, takes about 5 mins more to unpack once home. Sometimes, especially when I goto Sainsburys I feel like I have lost hours in there.
Oh sorry, yes I can see that 
You need to learn the tricks of the trade :-) shop with ikea bags, straight into the trolley so no repack. Put your items on the conveyor belt in categories, heavy first, meat together, fridge etc etc. ( you can pack these in smaler bags on your way round if you wish)
I also avoid weekends and find a big aldi so much better!!
I find it way less stressful than tesco as its so efficient when you master the above.
S'Ok DH 
you can't see me through the screen!
Aldi is the ONLY shop that I specifically go to for things - their nappies, washing powder, washing up liquid are great. I've also stocked up on cremant de jura for Christmas because it is yum and so much better than any champagnes even close to my budget and I love their almond chocolate bars too. The packing is "abrupt" but you get used to it - as Maryz says they have really useful long conveyor belts so no excuse for being disorganised.
Oh and they have plenty of trolleys which can accommodate both a toddler and a baby.
Actually we could use a bit of a stock up - now that DH is stirring from his bed I might go and drag him off to Aldi :-)
Unless I'm literally getting bread and milk, I always get a trolley. It's much easier.
I try and load all the heavy/bulky stuff onto the checkout first then the lighter stuff. I have two massive reusable bags that I have opened ready in the trolley and I packed them straight in after it's scanned. If the bags fill up there is normally space to put stuff in the rest of the trolley, and I repack it as I put it in the boot of the car. Toilet rolls, juice cartons, nappies I don't pack, just leave to one side in the trolley and just put on the parcel shelf of the car.
It works for me anyway. 
I have to say, Rooney, You are very brave. I don't think I would use my local Aldi when 8 months pregnant. I think I would pay more and go somewhere a little more civilised.
I always feel sorry for little old ladies in Aldi (irritated at their slowness, but simultaneously sorry for them
).
YABU and a bit wet.
FFSIt'sJustShoppingTiggaxx
Rooney
YABU.
Any supermarket you've not been in before / regularly takes a bit of getting used to the layout - that's not to do with it being Aldi.
You just have to work with the system. They are the absolute BEST supermarket for getting though quickly, simply because you don't have to wait while eveyone in front of you packs all their stuff. It all gets put in the trolley then you can spend as long as you want packing it into your own system.
I went to Morrisons this week - not even at the weekend, it was a Monday morning! - and it took 18 mins from when I joined the queue, until she started serving me. Give me Aldi anytime.
Oh thanks Mary, yes I feel sorry for them too. I understand and I do get cross if people are VERY slow but what can you do.
Sometimes I think they do it on purpose. 
I shop at aldi. I love it. Ours is very good, organised and the staff are polite. I did get a cats bum face from the checkout woman though the other day when she asked me halfway through through throwing my stuff at me was I paying by card or by cash and I replied I'll make that decision at the end when you give me the total!
Why do they ask you that? Is is because it shaves two seconds of the total time it takes to hurry a customer through the checkout or what?
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