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Early birds catch deals

Published on Saturday, Nov 28, 2009 at 12:12 am | Last updated on Friday, Nov 27, 2009 at 11:11 pm 4 Comments

AUBURN — Hordes of shoppers ushered in the Christmas season Friday by getting up early — a common time seemed to be 3:30 a.m. — and hitting the stores.

Long before the sun was up, parking lots were bustling at Best Buy, Kmart, Kohl's, JC Penney's, Walmart, Home Depot and more.

A few minutes after 6 a.m., Don Drouin of Leeds was in the Home Depot checkout line, his cart barely holding a large, four-burner outdoor gas grill.

Drouin seemed as happy as a man with new tools, grinning as he shared what he saved. "This usually goes for $299. Now it's $179. They're nice," he said. Under the grill in his cart were tools. "This drill is $39. It's usually pretty expensive."

Drouin got up at 3:30. "I never do this." His wife, Jean, was his motivation. "We'll probably have breakfast then do a little more shopping," she said.

A few feet away Peter Higgins of Greene was wheeling out two wet/dry vacuums he bought for $20 each. "They have a lifetime guarantee, 5 horsepower," Higgins said. "They normally sell for $99. It's a good deal, absolutely. You'll see everybody going out with these things."

Well, not everybody.

The store had about 125 of them when it opened at 6 a.m. Twenty minutes later they were gone.

At Big Lots, Joyce Michaud of Leeds looked like a seasoned early-birder, holding a flier in her hand looking for that special toy on sale.

She found the "Create-A-Story" software, which allows children to "direct" their own animations, for $20. It usually sells for $49.99. "It's a good price. It's for my granddaughter. It'll be good for her."

Most years Michaud doesn't shop early on Black Friday because she was at work. This year "I'm unemployed," she said. Price is critical, Michaud said. "I'm really shopping smart, looking for the right deals."

New rules at Walmart

At Walmart early shoppers adjusted to new rules to promote safety after a New York worker was trampled to death last Black Friday. This year there were no long lines outside; the store opened at midnight so no one had to wait in the cold, said store manager Dale Brann. Shoppers after the hot deals lined up at different spots in the store and waited for 5 a.m. when the sales began.

Until 5 a.m., the specials were wrapped in black plastic with workers stationed at each spot.

At 4:45 a.m., Brandy Marchetti of Auburn stood in line for a PlayStation 3 console.

"We've been here since 9 p.m. (Thursday)," Marchetti said. She came for the PS3, which normally sells for $299, "but this one has two games and a movie," saving her $139.

Marchetti usually shops early Black Friday, but normally doesn't spend the night in line, she said. "If I don't get one of these, I will be ugly, but I think I will. I am the front of the line."

So was Kevin LeClair of Buckfield, who said he arrived at Walmart at 7 p.m. Thanksgiving. LeClair and his wife are veteran early-birders. "This is my sixth year. My wife's done it 13 years." She was in another line waiting to buy children's pajamas for $3.

Kate Lydon of Lewiston was in line for a TomTom on sale for $89 that usually sells for $199. Lydon shopped early for the savings and "the excitement. I'm a Christmas freak. I really love Christmas. Two weeks before Thanksgiving I'm listening to Christmas music and in the spirit."

When 5 a.m. arrived workers removed the black plastic and handed out the products to avoid rushes. The store grew busy. Shopping carts loaded with televisions, toys, computers, clothing and household goods moved around like bumper cars. By 5:30, lines of carts were jammed at registers like cars on the New Jersey Turnpike.

 Restaurants busy, too

Restaurants also benefited from more shoppers being out early. Auburn's Arby's, which normally doesn't serve at breakfast time, opened its drive-through at 8 a.m.

Dunkin' Donuts was extremely busy, said manager Melissa Lazaro. A line of vehicles waiting for the drive-through went out to Center Street most of the morning, Lazaro said. When Dunkin' Donuts opened at 4 a.m., "cars were waiting for us at the speaker."

In Rumford, Marden's was scheduled to open one hour earlier at 8 a.m. But because shoppers lined up at the door, the store was opened at 7:30 a.m., said manager Roberta Wallace. One good seller was DeWalt work boots, industrial footwear. Another was gingerbread house kits.

bwashuk@sunjournal.com

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

Winterbear98's picture

CERTAINLY NOT WORTH THE TRIP

CERTAINLY NOT WORTH THE TRIP

K0NPHL1C7's picture

The PS3 deal wasn't anything

The PS3 deal wasn't anything good either. 2 crappy games and a crapy movie.

The biggest "deal" was the Emerson HDTV for $248.99. Thats a 100$ savings....Standing in line for 5 hours to save $100.00...I thought about it, but my sleep time is wrth more than $20.00/hour.

Winterbear98's picture

ps3 are still there

ps3 are still there

crystal1982's picture

That stinks to have to stand

That stinks to have to stand in line that long for a PS3 considering they still had some at 8:00 am when i was there.

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