2 minute read

Drive-throughs play a bigger role than most expect

Many tales have been relayed over the years about the patience and the ability to endure possessed by the successful outdoors enthusiast. But I believe that pales in comparison to that possessed by the average employee at the drive-through window who must deal with them. Those people are the real heroes.

The sad part is most of us are blissfully unaware of what drive-through attendants must tolerate. But, if you think about it, no hunting or fishing trip would be complete without a drive-through visit on the way there and back.

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Typically, there is very little verbal interaction on the first visit. The outdoors enthusiasts involved are too eager to get to where they are going, so they can become the heroes they were meant to be.

The real problems begin on the way back.

How bad is it? Well, I once witnessed a poor drive-through attendant listen patiently as a veteran outdoorsman wove an entire hunting story between ordering a medium coffee and a blueberry muffin. It was even difficult for me to take, and I was the one telling it.

STEVE GALEA

Not-So-Great Outdoorsman through basically serves as the outdoorsman’s or outdoorswoman’s confessional.

A typical conversation starts something like this: Drive-through attendant: Hello, welcome to (Place establishment name here). How can I help you?

Outdoors enthusiast: You can help by making me a regular, medium coffee, and you can help my friend by teaching him how to use his bait-casting reel….Har! Har! Har!...”

After that, the attendant is typically regaled with how the fishing day went, the hilarious hi-jinks that occurred at the boat launch, and perhaps given a presentation on the finer points of lure selection. Then he or she will be fooled into thinking that the customer is going to pay-by-phone when in fact, the outdoors person is just offering up photos of the biggest fish of the day.

The thing we should all appreciate most is that the drive-through attendant is essentially the first responder for these stories. They are the ones who blunt the traumatic force of the tale before it ever gets home. If it wasn’t for them, the family, and friends of the outdoors enthusiast in question would get the first draft, before it is refined and

Sadly, this is their fate every day during the hunting and fishing seasons, whether the news is good, bad, or just exaggerated. That’s because a drive- → GALEA 10

When the Kitchener Sports Association holds its dinner meeting Feb. 21 at the Edelweiss Sports Tavern in Kitchener, the KW Titans will be on the menu. Team owner Dave Schooley and members of the coach staff will be on hand to discuss the 2023 season. www.kitchenersports.ca

Having posted a 3-2 overtime win Tuesday against KCI in the quarter-finals, the EDSS boys’ hockey team today (Thursday) faces Grand River Collegiate in the WCSSAA semi-finals. Game time is 2 p.m. at the WMC. The Lancers have a record of 8-1-2-1.

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