Nightstar99
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2012
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I've been to quite a few Pets at Home and they are generally ok. Some are better than others depending on who is staffing them at the time. Sometimes the fish tanks are a bit iffy, but the cute and furries all seem fine, and they give you free vet care for a few months after you buy them.
The stores are welcoming and easy to navigate, everything is generally laid out nicely, and the staff are approachable and helpful. I know a girl who worked for them for several years and they have to do an awful lot for their minimum wage. She worked for stores all over as they let her transfer wherever she wanted to move, but quit in the end as she had enough of the workload. She was animal crazy and wouldnt have worked there if she thought the company was callously mistreating animals as a matter of policy.
As others have said they have the adoption centres, and people may not be aware that they also get a lot of unwanted animals dumped on their doorsteps overnight; often these are animals they don't even sell (parrots, cats and dogs etc); but the staff still spend time ringing round finding places to take them.
The company does try to sell fish correctly with the little interview they give you when you buy something. I wouldn't go there for advice unless its a particular assistant I know is knowledgeable (there are some) I've been told, and heard people being told, complete nonsense when buying fish; but if they only employed people with zoology degrees I couldn't afford to shop there anyway.
Its high volume low margin retail, and predominantly the (mostly young) staff are under pressure to hit store targets so I think you have to be a bit understanding. As a parent I like it, as I can take my little kid there. He can see all the cute animals and fishies, get over excited about it all and we still get smiles rather than scowls from the staff.
I know that things get overlooked at Pets at Home, and in general I try to only buy dry goods from there but overall I think they're more good than bad. A lot of people will start off keeping fish by going there to coo over the hamsters and walking out with an aquarium and some fish, which is good for the hobby. Most of us will then seek out more knowledgeable /reliable smaller places when we get more into it, which is good for those other shops, and good for fish.
If I cast my mind back 15 years ago or so and think of what many pet shops in the UK used to be like, pre Pets at Home and pre internet.Some were fine, but seriousy, many were cramped godawful places full of sick diseased animals crammed into little cages with empty water bottles. Thank god most of them have gone bust. Pets at Home is partly to thank for that.
The stores are welcoming and easy to navigate, everything is generally laid out nicely, and the staff are approachable and helpful. I know a girl who worked for them for several years and they have to do an awful lot for their minimum wage. She worked for stores all over as they let her transfer wherever she wanted to move, but quit in the end as she had enough of the workload. She was animal crazy and wouldnt have worked there if she thought the company was callously mistreating animals as a matter of policy.
As others have said they have the adoption centres, and people may not be aware that they also get a lot of unwanted animals dumped on their doorsteps overnight; often these are animals they don't even sell (parrots, cats and dogs etc); but the staff still spend time ringing round finding places to take them.
The company does try to sell fish correctly with the little interview they give you when you buy something. I wouldn't go there for advice unless its a particular assistant I know is knowledgeable (there are some) I've been told, and heard people being told, complete nonsense when buying fish; but if they only employed people with zoology degrees I couldn't afford to shop there anyway.
Its high volume low margin retail, and predominantly the (mostly young) staff are under pressure to hit store targets so I think you have to be a bit understanding. As a parent I like it, as I can take my little kid there. He can see all the cute animals and fishies, get over excited about it all and we still get smiles rather than scowls from the staff.
I know that things get overlooked at Pets at Home, and in general I try to only buy dry goods from there but overall I think they're more good than bad. A lot of people will start off keeping fish by going there to coo over the hamsters and walking out with an aquarium and some fish, which is good for the hobby. Most of us will then seek out more knowledgeable /reliable smaller places when we get more into it, which is good for those other shops, and good for fish.
If I cast my mind back 15 years ago or so and think of what many pet shops in the UK used to be like, pre Pets at Home and pre internet.Some were fine, but seriousy, many were cramped godawful places full of sick diseased animals crammed into little cages with empty water bottles. Thank god most of them have gone bust. Pets at Home is partly to thank for that.