Scottish Daily Mail

Share your feast

-

THOSE who complain they don’t know what to do with all the food they have bought for the now cancelled Christmas (Letters) should perhaps emulate our local initiative.

Christmas dinners will be delivered to those spending the day alone.

GAY WISEMAN, Edlesborou­gh, Bucks.

Jeff Bailey of daventry (Letters) complains about having ‘masses of food and no one to eat it’ following the ‘ cancellati­on’ of Christmas. Mr Bailey should consider himself lucky that he, presumably, still has a job, or at least the means to buy ‘masses of food’, unlike many others who have lost jobs and income.

as to what to do with the food, i am sure he could find a nearby food bank or charity that would gratefully relieve him of the surplus, thus ensuring a happier Christmas for someone less fortunate.

JOHN HERBERT, alexandria, dunbartons­hire.

ALL my Christmas plans have had to change due to the new restrictio­ns and i will be unable to see most of my family. However, i have a plan.

all the decoration­s, Christmas tree and presents will stay in place until we can all meet again. even if that is not until the summer, eventually we will celebrate our family Christmas.

MAGGIE BODE, high Wycombe, Bucks.

My local superstore looked like a scene from Black friday yesterday as shoppers snapped up loo rolls before descending on the rapidly disappeari­ng pita bread, ready-made pastry, cheese slices and wafer-thin ham.

research is needed to lift the lid on this dark corner of British life. it drives me round the bend.

ALLAN SUTHERLAND, Stonehaven, Kincardine­shire.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom