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  • Yard Sale Suck

    So my brother's Boy Scout troop does a yard sale every spring to raise money for their large trip in the summer ( I think they're heading to Washington D.C. if I remember right), and every year my father and I go down and help. Mostly because it gives me something to do, and because I get first grabs at the treasures. I was especially excited to go this year because I start my field training for teaching in the fall, so I wanted to see how many teachables I could snag.

    Everything they sell is a donation someone gave away, so we get a lot of closet cleaners bringing us our stuff the week before, and then we have to sort it all to make sure it's still sellable.

    Despite the rain and the current state of the economy, we had a great turnout and grossed about $8600, about $300 less than last year but still pretty decent. Despite this, we still got our fair share of suckies.

    The most common thing I saw was how people decided they would pay. While most of the stuff was marked, we'd ask customers to make us an offer of what they wanted to pay, and we'd make a deal from that. Too many people took advantage of this, and literally pulled whatever pocket change they had out, dumped into my hand, said "This should do," then walked off with whatever they were buying. While I never saw pennies (thank goodness, I'd have had an aneurysm...), dropping $.75 into my hand for that set of flatware was still kind of low.

    We also had people who insisted on paying when they left...and never paid. The way our sale was set up, we had different areas, much like a department store ( toys, clothes, housewares, etc.) There was at least one "cashier" stationed at each area, and before you wandered off to another spot, you paid for anything you picked up in that area. Some decided it would be better to pay at the door (like a checkout counter), but when they'd get there they'd say "Oh, I already paid for this" and walk out, so it was hard to catch them and call them out.

    The suckiest thing happened just after 3 in the afternoon. We were trying to wrap the sale up, so we got the bright idea of handing out paper bags and offering people to fill them as full as they could, and we'd only charge $2 per bag. People apparently misheard the "per bag" part and decided it was $2 for all bags. When told otherwise, they'd leave the filled bags behind and walk out. They'd usually have 5 bags on them when this happened.

    I think I lost the last bit of faith in humanity this weekend...

  • #2
    Yard sales will do that... ><

    My Girl Guide group has a garage sale next Saturday. Eek!

    On the up side, I've already snagged several useful items for my new apartment, and I move in on Sunday, so that is handy.

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    • #3
      Ah, garage sales. You're *guaranteed* to see plenty of suck at them.

      It never surprised me just how cheap some people are. I hate to say it, but it was *always* the older people. They'd show up in a Cadillac that cost more than both of my parents' cars...and get upset because we wouldn't haggle on a 50-cent item. They'd flip out if a plate had a small speck of dirt on it, or that something for $1 was "too expensive."

      People like that are *exactly* why my troop quit having the sale. We got tired of having to wash everything, and the idiots who would complain. Oh, and don't get me started on people who would donate *junk* to the sale. It just got to be more trouble than it was worth.
      Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines. --Enzo Ferrari

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      • #4
        Do I have stories from the yard/estate sale we held to clean out my grandmother's house. The first weekend when we didn't put any signs out at all we did fairly well; we had a lot of (IMO fugly) furniture, one couple stopped by where the husband had a small refinishing business, he bought the lion's share of it at our asking prices. A friend of mom's brought iced coffee and donuts and generally a good time was had by all.

        The next weekend when we decided to put a sign out...great googly moogly was that a mess. There were other sales going on in the neighborhood at the time, and I think that was the problem. Boneheaded offers for a collectible vintage set of Noritake china (no we won't take $2...it is appraised at $250)...some knob dropped and broke the most unique piece in the set (myself and the caretaker wanted to charge the culprit for what it would cost to replace the one piece, but mom said no ) Couple thieves--mainly stealing toys--and attempted scams.

        I did manage to unload a haunted Ouija board on a suitably creepy-looking guy (there were actually two boards in the box, one 50s Parker Brothers and one all-wood original Fulton board from the 1890s). He wanted both boards, I didn't want him to get the wood one so told him that one had already been sold.
        "I am quite confident that I do exist."
        "Excuse me, I'm making perfect sense. You're just not keeping up." The Doctor

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        • #5
          The haggling definitely was ridiculous, but what got me was the people who expect "newer" stuff at a yard sale. We had people asking us for some of the next-gen gaming systems, when the closest we had to a PS3 were a few PSone games. Others wanted iPods, we had 8-tracks and their docking systems.

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          • #6
            i love going to garage sales. i actually went this past weekend to find things for my new apartment.

            on the flip side of things, sometimes the people hosting the garage sales can be just as rude, or expect too much for things.

            one i went to, had a set a dinner trays. they were in fine condition, and were the same ones my parents had when i was growing up. i had actually seen a set VERY similar at a store for about $20. they wanted $30. to me, that was too much. if i was osting, i would have probably put those out for 10-15. at the most. knowing me i would ave gon lower just to get rid of them.

            at another one, my boyfriend was holding my sons hand, and let go for a second to look at something. my son wanted a toy, so he started running to get to it. he knocked into something, butjust made a noise. he didn't knock it over, or break anything. so i go over to get him, cause i didn't want him to. my friend who's with us calls him by his shortened name, and i call him by his full name. at this point, he isn't running. just standing there. as im about to grab him, one of the ladies hosting the garage sales gets up and yells,"ALEKSANDER! get over here now!"

            i dind't say a work, but it got to me, that, yes while my child did bump into something, i was handling the situation. he is two years old, and when they see a toy they want, they want to go get it! so im sorry he bumped into anything, but im getting him, and not allowing him to run anymore. we didn't think he wouldrun the first time cause he had been behaving all day.

            so in the end, im sorry my son bumped into to something, but if you see me handling the situation, please, let me as his mother handle it.

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            • #7
              I did a garage sale with a family-owned daycare I worked for; donated quite a bit of stuff to it, including an 8-foot long snake my stepfather won from the state fair (it was an awesome, gigantic snake).

              One woman came up, amassed a small pile of stuff, and while she was doing this, her friend loaded the snake into the car, hoping we wouldn't see her stealing it.

              We called her on the snake when it came time for her to pay (for one 25 cent item, after all that); cue cat-butt face as she unloaded it and drove off without anything.

              Seriously, WTF. It was a STUFFED SNAKE. We were asking $5 for it, obo.

              Garage sales attract the worst kinds.
              "Do not quibble with me over apostrophes. I have my shit together when it comes to apostrophes." - BookBint

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              • #8
                one of my co-workers had a yard sale before she went overseas. i showed up to hang out for a little and bought a couple of items... and found out that earlier in the day someone had swiped the dvds from their cases

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                • #9
                  ive seen people make faces over $1 as "too much"

                  wtf are you expecting ?!

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                  • #10
                    Ours was primarily an estate sale; the nice stuff that was worth something was priced below what an auctioneer would have paid.

                    Some kid was asking about a GameCube; the only game system we had was an Intellivision of questionable functionality (all the TVs in the house are too new to test it). I'm not sure if I want to part with my "brick" Gameboy or Dreamcast.

                    Shame about the Noritake though; I wanted it if it didn't sell
                    "I am quite confident that I do exist."
                    "Excuse me, I'm making perfect sense. You're just not keeping up." The Doctor

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                    • #11
                      Been there, done that. Years ago, when we were *finally* getting rid of our Apple III (basically an Apple II that could run DOS), quite a few people were whining that it didn't have a hard drive. Uh, what part of "heavily discounted, heavily used, piece of crap don't you understand?"
                      Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines. --Enzo Ferrari

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                      • #12
                        I always pull the hard drives of any computers I sell (unless I just happen to have an extra drive laying around, then it gets a barebones Linux install) and I make sure the buyer knows this. You want a clean sparkly Windoze hard drive in the $50 POS you just bought, I'll be happy to do it for you IF you pay upfront for the drive, OS, and install.
                        "I am quite confident that I do exist."
                        "Excuse me, I'm making perfect sense. You're just not keeping up." The Doctor

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                        • #13
                          GAAAAH! I hate trying to have a garage sale! I only did it once, that was too much for me!

                          I mean, 4 resin stacker chairs a dollar each... lady spends 5 minutes examining each, then offers 50 cents... for the lot! I said no way... and she stays another minute looking at the chairs.

                          Fancy candle holders, jars, jugs, the type that sell at local thrift stores for 2-5 dollars, priced to move at 50c each, guy wants to offer 10 cents. At that point I told him and Chair Lady to GTFO and closed the garage door.
                          Suckiness is reinforced up OR down at every transaction. Accepting BS makes them worse for all of us; firm fairness trains them to suck less.

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                          • #14
                            My friend is an apartment manager and when people leave or are evicted they always leave things behind even when they have a lot of time to move it. So he ends up haveing a garage sell a copule times a year so the apartment can recover the costs. You get some sucky people but most people want to feel like they made a good deal so we stated listeing the things above what we wanted so people could 'haggle' us down to a lower price. And we always get one person coming through who wants to buy 1 item wiht a $100 bill - it's a garage sale we don't have that much cash on us idiot.

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                            • #15
                              At a family garage sale, my sister in law had marked a particular item at $2. It was a ice little framed picture, I thought it was kid cute and would have bought it except I was in the process of getting rid of alot of stuff so I could move.

                              This guy, and trust me anyone involved with a garage sale will know the type - creepy looking guy, who takes an inordinate amount of interest in most items. This particular one had a bike. I don't know why that is in here but meh

                              Told my sister in law he would give her 10c for it(the lowest denomination in NZ currency). She said no. He kept trying to haggle, and I could see she was being worn down so I told her no, its $2 or maybe $1 if she wanted but no way was someone going to tell her how much she should sell something for!

                              Long story short, he eventually said "I'm willing to buy this come on!" and I said "but you won't be the only one today - its $2 take it or leave it". He eventually did but pissed and moaned about it!

                              Its the principle of the matter!

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