My dad stayed at my house for a couple of weeks after my wife died and he was doing most of the laundry. I had a giant jug of All that was supposed to do 110 loads or so. It was mostly full when he came and almost empty when he left. I happened to be out in the garage one day when he was loading the washer and watched him pour the cup filled to the brim in. I asked him why he was using so much soap and he replied, "I always use a full cup." I think they calculate the number of loads based on filling the cup to maybe the 3rd mark.
Usually it's the "we don't want to ship it to you but if we must, here's what it will cost you for inconveniencing us" price. Plus wally wants to charge you another 5 bucks for even placing the order.
I find a LOT of CDN wally stuff sold online is shown as not available in the store.
Maybe it's the fact that Zote is made in Mexico. Last time I was in Canada (business trip) we were talking about immigrants in the US. I said many come to the US thru Canada. The Canadian guy said "That's because we're friends with more people that you are." At that time people from some countries couldn't come direct to the US. What that has to do with Zote I don't know but remembered that conversation.
Maybe more friends BUT I think better opportunities in the US than here. For one thing, it seems the "majority" of nice climate is more prevalent in the US than here.
After all, 90% of ALL Canucks live within 100 miles of the US border. Because any further north it's too damn cold for too long 🥶
I think they also calculate on clothes that don't really need washing. When doing a project after I take them off they really need washing. The wife is on a pod kick. The big print says 110 loads. The small print says heavily soiled clothing requires 2.
We like the powder concoction I posted about. I don't get my clothes nearly as dirty as when I was working, I had one shirt that had been soaked in gear lube and 10 years later you could still smell that crap in the fabric using commercial detergent. One tablespoon full is sufficient and it's saving us a ton of money. Clothes are clean and colors stay bright. Even jeans don't go light blue quickly, you really can't tell they've been washed 5 or more dozen times. Works for us.
Interesting. We let our Sam's membership go years ago because we weren't spending enough there. Membership is $45 last I knew so you'd need to spend $450 to break even on the membership. We didn't spend quite that much yearly there.
I've got mine and plan to keep it. It's still $45 a year and I spend about $400 every 3-4 months stocking up on meats and paper products so it pays to keep it. But if I just want 1-2 things it's not worth driving to the store (or the impulse buying) so I order it via Amazon.
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