Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't decide what makes me more sad, people buying 10 boxes of cookies (wow) or people trying to skimp out of helping girl scouts to get a deal on said cookies.
Donate the money to the troop instead. And not just the charity cookie donation, just straight-up donation. Around here, if the troop skips the "incentive" rewards, we get 70 cents on the box (whether it's a $4 box or a $5 box).
I am freaking sick and tired of *selling* Girl Scout cookies. It's so much work for so little return. At the end of cookie season, I figured out that if each family had just chipped in an extra $50 we could have saved hours of our lives.
Anonymous wrote:They aren't smaller. You just got bigger probably from eating too many cookies. And they are $4 around here. And they didn't even taste good way back in the 80s when I sold them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are different versions of the same flavor cookie?
Yes. I swear the Maryland area used to sell the "name brand" cookies, and then switched over to the "generic"a few years ago. They are NASTEE. They DO NOT taste the same AT ALL. I will not be purchasing any more generic cookies - I will just donate directly.
Anonymous wrote:There are different versions of the same flavor cookie?
a few years ago. They are NASTEE. They DO NOT taste the same AT ALL. I will not be purchasing any more generic cookies - I will just donate directly.Anonymous wrote:It's March 2019 and because the cost went up a full dollar per box from last year, our family only bought two boxes from the neighbor's girl -- tagolongs and somoas (where before I spent the full $20 on five boxes; one going to the military overseas). Both boxes only contain 15 cookies. In the case of the tagolongs, the amount of empty space to cookie was 40/60 percent. We hate to not support our neighbor's child but this year is has been our last. To charge a dollar more and give less product takes nerve. It is also up to each chapter to set the price of each item which is why the child of my friend in South Jersey sold her boxes for $4 instead of $5 a box (except for the gluten-free cookies, which would be $5 instead of my area's $6 a box. I intend to write GSA and let them know. The tough one is telling the next door neighbor we have to stop supporting them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't decide what makes me more sad, people buying 10 boxes of cookies (wow) or people trying to skimp out of helping girl scouts to get a deal on said cookies.
Donate the money to the troop instead. And not just the charity cookie donation, just straight-up donation. Around here, if the troop skips the "incentive" rewards, we get 70 cents on the box (whether it's a $4 box or a $5 box).
I am freaking sick and tired of *selling* Girl Scout cookies. It's so much work for so little return. At the end of cookie season, I figured out that if each family had just chipped in an extra $50 we could have saved hours of our lives.
Anonymous wrote:Can't decide what makes me more sad, people buying 10 boxes of cookies (wow) or people trying to skimp out of helping girl scouts to get a deal on said cookies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1!!!Anonymous wrote:Go to Aldi. Thin Mints for 1.25 that taste amazing.
Seriously. And Aldi doesn't allow hydrogenated fats or palm oil. Donate to your local GS troop. They don't get any money from cookie sales, it all goes to corporate.
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, the whole cookie enterprise has gone over the top in terms of pressuring the volunteers and their kids and absorbing activity time. The sell that this is about teaching business skills to 7 year olds begins to look threadbare when parents are pressed to sell more of these items at work to “keep people off my back.” Give the troops the cash.