Lately, I have found myself out and about in Napa with some unusual items in my handbag, items that I wouldn't normally carry around with me. Stuff like, a pound of minced beef, a glass and bronze fruit bowl, a woollen jumper, a baguette (I felt so Parisian) and a rather snazzy, reflective flea collar (not for me, obviously). I wasn't carrying all of these items at once - my everyday handbag is big, but not that big. No, each item represented a single trip to a store on a day when I had forgotten to take a reusable bag with me.
As of January 1st 2015, single use plastic bags have been banned in the city of Napa. There are a few exceptions to the new ordinance e.g., bags for prescription drugs and take-out food are exempt, for now. But if one happens to need to transport groceries home, and have forgotten to bring a bag, the store is required by law to charge the customer at least 10 cents for a paper bag.
I thought that alcoholic beverages were something that had to be bagged. I buy quite a bit of wine at wineries and they will not let you leave the premises without bagging the bottle first, so when I recently bought a bottle of wine at Vallerga's Market in Napa I patiently waited for my purchase to be bagged. And I waited. Then I asked for a bag. Well, to cut a long story short the cashier and I had a bit of a barney, in fact he was still shouting at me as I left the store. Great customer service, eh? I won't be shopping at that store any time soon.
I did a bit of research and apparently I was wrong, I have to admit it. Neither the city nor the county (where most wineries are located) of Napa require alcohol to be bagged: the same goes for the entire state of California. Whilst California does enforce a strict "no open container" law, that prevents any alcoholic beverage being unsealed in public, or in a car, the California Alcoholic Beverage Control Act (as of November 2011) does indeed allow folks to walk down the street with a naked bottle of hooch in their hand - as long as it is unopened. This is a difficult concept for me to get my head around.
In puritanical America - the only country in the world that has been able to enact a law such as the Volstead Act, and even in this day and age does not legally allow an adult to consume an alcoholic beverage until they are 21 years old - am I right in assuming that I would be able to walk down a busy street in broad daylight with a screwcap-bottle of wine, albeit unopened, in my hand? Call me old fashioned, but I don't think the local constabulary is going to endorse that sort of behaviour any time soon.
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
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8 comments:
VG: Can you smoke a joint in public?
Fightinf with staff...a family hobby.
Dennis...Vinogirl and I are so anti drugs we belong in a museum.
NHW: I'd personally throw a bucket of water over someone who was doing that in front of me.
Thud: I'm a traditionalist, I like to keep things going even on this side of the Atlantic.
Constabulary? What country are you in???
Tomasso: Ha! This may come as a shock to the average Amerocentrist out there, but sometimes Americans aren't my target audience.
Well then, VG, you have more readers than Vinofictions managed to snare...
VG: You understand I was contrasting with absurdity?
Keep in mind that a PC incorrect assault might get you in trouble, but hyperbole works for me!
NHW: PC, as in police constable? Hee, hee.
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