It's a losing battle, but I'm going to keep fighting.
What I found interesting, though, was that two carts had disappeared. They were the colored ones from the dollar store and a local department store. It seemed that someone else was returning carts as well. I figured it might be local employees of those stores, but I couldn't be sure. In any case, I was momentarily happy that I was not the only one doing this work.
From the carts pictured above, I returned four to Wal-Mart and six to the grocery store. I picked up one more for the grocery store that had been abandoned outside a fast food restaurant in the shopping center. I didn't take a picture of that one.
I'm now taking the carts in trains of only four at a time. The rope proved to be less effective at steering the cart trains than I wanted it to be. Instead, I just wear hiking boots (to protect my feet from being run over by the cart wheels, which has happened twice now) and gloves (to protect my fingers from getting pinched and to absorb the vibrations from the wheels clattering over the cracks in the pavement).
On one trip back, I took a different route than the one I usually take and found these poor little carts, left alone behind a strip mall two parking lots away from their home store, forgotten in the shadows behind stores that simply did not use their rear doors very often. They looked lonely, so I took them home.
Again, I wasn't able to collect all the carts I wanted to, but I did make a difference.
This evening, as I returned home, I noticed that two carts had joined ten or so I had to leave at the dumpster. They were both colored. One was from the dollar store; the other was from the department store. I don't know if they were the same carts that I had earlier thought had been returned, but there they were. Regardless of how they got there, I was annoyed.
Sometime next week, I hope to return the rest.
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