My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

to think this is a bit of an insult to our parenting?

84 replies

KateMess · 26/08/2009 16:22

DP was in Slummerfields yesterday with his nephew, aged 12. Along with a few bits of food, he picked up a bottle of wine, but was refused service at the till, because nephew is underage . DP's protestations that we wouldn't be providing rioja top-ups fell on cloth deaf ears.

DP brought nephew home and returned to make his feelings more strongly felt. The manager admitted possibly over-zealous enforcement by the cashier (who had been sent 'out back') but refused to serve DP the wine 'because he didn't much like his attitude'. He can have this second point - I've often refused him things on the same basis.

DP is 37 and so clean-cut he was once invited to join an boy-band, so don't go telling me he must have looked rough.

Is this occurring elsewhere?

OP posts:
Report
PartOfTheHumphreysGroup · 26/08/2009 16:25

how bizarre.

Report
IdrisTheDragon · 26/08/2009 16:26

I have heard about this happening to other people with children of around that age. Does seem odd.

Report
MmeLindt · 26/08/2009 16:28

How strange. I would not be shopping there again.

Are we now not allowed a glass of wine if we have our children with us?

Report
OrmIrian · 26/08/2009 16:30

Very strange.

So if he had left DN outside or home alone and popped in for the wine he's have been OK?

Report
OtterInaSkoda · 26/08/2009 16:32

Good grief! Still, if it catches on it might help reduce my alcohol intake...

Report
EyeballsintheSky · 26/08/2009 16:36

Great, but if your nephew had gone in on his own and tried to buy some cheapy cider they probably would have served him . No one uses any common sense any more, do they?

Report
KateMess · 26/08/2009 16:36

I would be more understanding if DP had been disheveled or drunk etc, but we were on our way back from a meal at pizza express and had consumed 3 cokes between us. DP was wearing a proper shirt!

Interesting it rings a bell with you Idris, I vaguely remember reading a thread about it on here but can't remember the details.

OP posts:
Report
moondog · 26/08/2009 16:37

Outrageous!!

Report
LaurieFairyCake · 26/08/2009 16:38

This is happening so much recently.

Yet another vote for online shopping.

Report
LovelyTinOfSpam · 26/08/2009 16:52

Have been a few threads about this recently.

Is bloody ridiculous. So now if you are within 10 feet of a child you can't buy alcohol?

The whole thing winds me up.

Report
TheCrackFox · 26/08/2009 16:52

I have heard of this happening before. It is ridiculous.

I think some shops have forgotten to hire staff with any common sense.

Report
KateMess · 26/08/2009 16:55

Yes, Laurie but unfortunately I am in denial about always underestimate how much wine one gets through in a week.

OP posts:
Report
naturalblonde · 26/08/2009 16:57

My dh went to buy some beers with his 15 yo brother and they refused to serve him. (The beers were for me and dh, not his bro btw!)

He's a serving police officer and they still wouldn't serve him even when he showed his warrant card.

Report
Tombliboobs · 26/08/2009 16:58

Ah well, it depends which boy band he was invited to join... Shane from Westlife or Brian Harvey from East 17? Until I know which I couldn't possibly comment

Report
southeastastra · 26/08/2009 16:59

i just bought tons of wine and had my 8 year old with me.

Report
Saltire · 26/08/2009 17:00

I don't understand why these places don't accept MOD military ID cards as proof of age as they ahve the Date of Birth of the person carrying it, plus a photo.

The shop along the road form me, which has been selling me wine cider and beer for the past 2 years, served by under 18s, has decided that everyone who purchases alcohol from them will be asked for ID, even if they are obviously over 18 - such as pensioners.

Report
IdrisTheDragon · 26/08/2009 17:00

There was definitely a thread on here about it.

Report
Saltire · 26/08/2009 17:01

There was a similar one today or yesterday about needing ID to buy alcohol.

Report
gettingagrip · 26/08/2009 17:02

Yes this has happened to me, in fact I have posted about this before I think.

Asda, Sainsbury's ....

If I have my teenagers with me this happens alot!

It's very embarrassing, and totally ridiculous.

I am 51!!

Report
LovelyTinOfSpam · 26/08/2009 17:04

Bit of a shocker they wouldn;t serve a copper

Report
Saltire · 26/08/2009 17:08

I know a woman who was refused alcohol becasue she had her 7 year old daughter with her at the till, along with her DH, her mother and her sister (38). The mother took the little girl to another till to buy a sweet and they let my friend have alcohol, then she let her 7 year old push the trolley out the shop and the assistant ran after and said "I can't allow you to let that child push the trolley and if you continue to do so I will be foreced to take the alcohol off you "

Report
KateMess · 26/08/2009 17:11

yet they have no problem selling rancid scotch eggs and melted haribo. I know, they've satisfied my midnight third trimester cravings on several occasions (DP always censors the online shop the bugger).

OP posts:
Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

MillyR · 26/08/2009 17:12

I don't understand. Has there been some law change? Are you not allowed to buy alcohol if you have a child with you?

Report
KateMess · 26/08/2009 17:12

Saltire that's incredible!

OP posts:
Report
TheDMshouldbeRivened · 26/08/2009 17:13

its mad because you can give alcohol to children in your own home. Thats legal!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.