Anonymous wrote:I would knock and tell them it's your order. Show the photo. Otherwise, how would they know? Maybe they don't know where it was supposed to go, or maybe one spouse assumes the other placed the order.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry not worth getting shot over. Would just call WF. All y’all who are saying confront are probably white
Knocking an a neighbor's door looking for a misdirected package isn't a confrontation. FFS.
Anonymous wrote:I would have knocked on the door and asked for it.
Anonymous wrote:ewwww i would not take food after someone else had it. You have no idea if they wash hands or have animals
or took a nibble. Just have it redelivered and be done with it.
Anonymous wrote:ewwww i would not take food after someone else had it. You have no idea if they wash hands or have animals
or took a nibble. Just have it redelivered and be done with it.
Anonymous wrote:Um, you knock on the door and tell your neighbor the situation. Why is this such an inconceivable concept?
They're probably being nice and refrigerating your perishables for you and brought inside the other stuff to discourage porch pirates.
They're probably posting on Nextdoor right now about a mistaken grocery delivery or hoping somebody knows where Jane Doe Llives bc they have griceries.
Anonymous wrote:We have some nasty neighbors who are so horrible to us that if we got their packages we would just leave it on the street next to the trash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, you knock on the door and tell your neighbor the situation. Why is this such an inconceivable concept?
They're probably being nice and refrigerating your perishables for you and brought inside the other stuff to discourage porch pirates.
They're probably posting on Nextdoor right now about a mistaken grocery delivery or hoping somebody knows where Jane Doe Llives bc they have griceries.
Yup. The problem is that WholeFoods orders they often put an incorrect name on orders. I had a neighbor who received an order for "Craig" but there is no Craig that lives anywhere on their street (she knows the neighbors on her street). She brought it in, put the perishables in the fridge and then went to the neighborhood FB group and posted it and we tried to help, but she never did find out who the order was for (I found a Craig on the next street over from hers, and she walked to their house, but they hadn't ordered anything from WholeFoods).
And OP, ours was in a neighborhood of SFH, so this doesn't just happen in apartment complexes. Go to the neighbor's ring the bell, show them the photo and ask if your groceries showed up there. If the neighbor denies that they have the groceries, then report to WF that the photo shown is not your door and the groceries did not arrive. See if they can replace the order today. If not, get a refund and send someone to the store to get what you need for dinner.