thinwater
Well-Known Member
This will be a good thing..
You will have to go to a local shop to buy tools . What an innovative idea .
Luddite.
This will be a good thing..
You will have to go to a local shop to buy tools . What an innovative idea .
Great MartynG if you happen to have a tool shop close by, but our nearest stockist that holds a good selection of tools is 30miles away, a round trip of 60 miles, or order on-line at the click of a button.
100,000 signatures only gives the government the opportunity to tell us why they are right and the petitioners are wrong... even though the crook who wants a blade for nefarious reasons need only go to a shop and buy one, (anonymously), or the kitchen drawer and pick one out.
This will be a good thing..
You will have to go to a local shop to buy tools . What an innovative idea .
You really need to fix the underlying culture that means people would ever consider throwing acid at someone acceptable. I think knife crime is the same TBH.
You can’t blame everything on the internet, try looking at the exhorbitant business rates that local councils place on businesses, parking restrictions, shed-loads of legislation that governments of all colours keep loading on to small businesses. Yes I still like to ‘pop’ in to my ‘local’ chandlers, but again I have to have a pretty good reason to drive the 120 mile round trip to my nearest chandler,to pick up a tin of boot-top or a couple of stainless steel shackles. In a lot of areas there aren’t enough potential customers to provide a chandlers, tool merchant or other specialist retailer to make a living. Even a small retail business needs a turnover of more than about £150,000 a year to be viable. There have for years been mail order companies, most of what the internet has done is make mail ordering easier and more efficient for those of us not blessed with a wide variety of retail outlets on our doorsteps. If I had a chandlers nearby I’d use them, but I don’t.If it had not been for the internet there might just have been a tool shop a lot nearer than 30 miles away with a bloke that knew what he was selling you & could offer some advice & service- along with a friendly smile (well sometimes !!!!!)
I support my local yachting chandler at Burnham as much as I can simply because I really do like to be able to walk in & browse , have a friendly chat & get what I need within a couple of hours.
I still go to the local tool shop on the Dengie (& have to tear myself away) rather than use the internet. I really hate the thought that one day it might not be there.
I am waiting to see if Axminster move off shore...
Ooo yes please, I think they have been content because their mail service is so good any disruption to that would be a problem for them.
A while ago I was in the UK and went into one of their branches to buy stuff and they were having difficulty finding me on their PC system so invited me around the counter to check my details. When we put the correct ones in up I popped with several pages of others in the Grenoble area. Apparently they have a huge amount of people in Europe that use them on a regular basis.
There is a pop up now that recognises that I am in France and reminds me that they post to here. So, if it is addressed to a place out of the UK, does that count in the new law?
Thought... contact some of the other clients around Grenoble and set up an entreprise so you can recieve goods as commercial?