There were some more trolleys left in the passage after the collection of the two making up Trolley 637, and I returned for one of them, a large Waitrose trolley. Snapped above, complete with a modest amount of litter, facing up the ramp from the Kokoro passage to Station Approach.
The others did not fit, in particular a small M&S trolley, which would have made walking more than one at a time rather awkward. There are limits to the extent that one wants to make an exhibition of oneself for the topers on the Wetherspoon's terrace.
Celebrated with a beverage in said Wetherspoon's, reasonably busy this Wednesday afternoon, not all pensioners. And where I was intrigued by the more or less geometrical Axminster carpet in the area where I sat, so contrived that the pattern recognised the boundaries of the area, which one does not usually get with Axminster; certainly not in the regular Axminster one might have fitted in one's home. I could not see any joins, but I think that there must have been some. And I wondered whether Wetherspoon's was a big enough operation to get his own carpet made up, but this morning's thought was not. Too expensive for a budget operation, fancy building refurbishments notwithstanding. That said, there are still some retail outfits - banks or shops - which do do this, perhaps having their name worked into the pattern. Maybe one such will come to mind as the morning progresses. Cruise liners? Bricks & mortar care homes?
References
Reference 1: https://psmv5.blogspot.com/2024/02/trolley-637.html.
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