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    Dollar General

    3.5 (2 reviews)
    InexpensiveGrocery, Discount Store
    Closed 8:00 am - 10:00 pm

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    13 years ago

    it has all the little nic-nacks you need or may have forgotten for the "low-low"! Cool Beans!!

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    12 years ago

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    Bargain Bins

    Bargain Bins

    (5 reviews)

    This place is the new interesting shopping place to go to. Bargain Bins is an overstock of Target…read moreand Amazon. Starting on Saturday the line is around the corner of the building with people waiting to get a deal. The warehouse is lined with wooden crates that are full of everything you can imagine from toys to blankets to household items. There are a couple of rules but they're pretty straight forward. Shopping: Adults 16 and older are given a large blue IKEA bag. Whatever you can fit in it you can buy for only $7! That's every single item in the store. Once the bag is full you have to pay but you can come back in as many times as you want. If there is a box you want opened to see inside just ask a store employee and they will be happy to help you. Opening it on your own will get you kicked out. Only a certain amount of people are allowed in at a time so you may have to wait. No large bags or purses are allowed inside so just bring your wallet. They take cash or card. Don't drag the blue bags because they will rip. Saturday's everything is $7, Sunday it's $5. Parking: parking is limited on busy days. The Goose Creek police are there on weekends to help with traffic control and making sure everyone behaves. Don't park in the local business parking spots or you'll get towed. You can line the roadway against the grass closer to the train tracks. Food: Yes! Food trucks are here on the weekend serving out delicious food for hungry shoppers. The staff is really friendly and helpful. You never know what you'll find hidden under the piles so have fun!

    My first time checking this place out. I was not too impressed, but I did come at 2pm. I assume…read moreif you are there at opening you might be able to find better products. Staff was pretty mellow with not a lot of interaction. I may come back one day at opening time.

    Where Ya Bin Charleston - I racked up!!

    Where Ya Bin Charleston

    (24 reviews)

    West Ashley

    I love this store! I cannot think of one time that an employee was rude to me. Granted, some are…read moremore friendly than others but overall no problem at all. You can find curt/rude employees anywhere. If you do not like to dig through the junk to find the treasures then don't go there. And NO! Everything is NOT broken. That's crazy. I'd say most is new and how it got there I don't care. I've bought guy/car things my son has sold. I have been finding great deals for the 1 1/2-2 years I've been going. I've sold many items - especially clothing on Ebay. Found numerous house hold items at fab prices. On Fridays when they restock all new items you need to know prices of things so you don't overpay but that comes from being a educated shopper. I've learned a lot over the years of thrifting and selling. I've gotten some very great deals there and I will keep on shopping! BTW I liked the girl with the curly hair and tattoos. She was super friendly.

    I am still in absolute disbelief about what happened at Where Ya Bin Charleston today. I have never…read morein my entire life been spoken to or treated the way I was by one of their employees. For context, Where Ya Bin is a BIN STORE. Which means the entire point of the store is for customers to dig, sift, and inspect overstock, returned, and damaged items. You go there to look, touch, and decide if something is worth buying. Sort of like a treasure hunt. Handling merchandise is not just allowed, it is expected. This context is what makes what happened today even more ridiculous. While shopping, I briefly pulled an item out of an already ripped-open, destroyed bag to get a better look at a visible crack. Before I could even put it back, a woman stormed up to me and immediately told me to "check out and leave." She did not identify herself as an employee or manager. In that moment she was just some stranger barking at me. When I said, "I'm sorry?" out of complete disbelief, she accused me of taking the item out of the bag. I calmly showed her the torn packaging and explained the item was literally falling out. Her response was, "It doesn't matter." At which point she laughed and says "See you just ripped it more." THE PLASTIC BAG WAS ALREADY RIPPED OPEN IN MULTIPLE PLACES. She then tried to justify her behavior by referencing an announcement that was supposedly playing in the store, that no one could hear, and that was in SPANISH. I don't speak Spanish. Neither did anyone around me. Expecting customers to comply with inaudible announcements in another language, with zero guidance or explanation, is absurd. Given her tone, I told her I was trying to be very kind and I just did not understand why I was being asked to leave. She responded, "I'm being kind too." At that point, I said, "Actually no, you're not. Your tone is incredibly disrespectful." Because she was. It almost felt like she was actively looking for a reason to remove my friends and I from the store. For context, this individual is about 5'2", has short black hair, and many visible tattoos and piercings. I mention this because her behavior made her unmistakably identifiable. Her approach was confrontational, accusatory, and entirely inappropriate. Based on the NUMEROUS Google reviews about the same individual with the exact same situation, this isn't a one off. It's a pattern. My friends and I immediately abandoned our very full cart and left. Between us, we would have easily spent $100-$300 each, nearly a $2,000+ sale lost all because of her actions. Believe it or not, it escalated further. While we were near our cars in the parking lot privately discussing the interaction, this same individual FOLLOWED US OUTSIDE. She stood against the wall smoking, staring directly at us, and clearly listening to our conversation. This was intimidating, unnecessary, and made me feel extremely uncomfortable as the one that had been singled out in a group of seven. Once we noticed her presence, we walked to the consignment store next door. Only after a couple of my friends returned to the store and asked to speak with a manager did this individual finally identify herself as one. Instead of providing any clarification, she forcefully told them to leave, claimed she "felt threatened," and stated that all of us were now banned. Claiming to feel threatened by customers who had already left and were then followed outside is WILD. Absolutely unbelievable. This was not a simple misunderstanding. This was a power trip, a misuse of authority, and a complete failure of basic professionalism. If this is how management reacts over a customer inspecting damaged merchandise, it says a lot about this store's culture. Charleston has plenty of bargain places to shop. This is not one I will be returning to until something changes with management. Anyone considering this store should think carefully before stepping inside.

    Cooper's Country Store - Cooper's Country Store Historical Marker, Salters

    Cooper's Country Store

    (15 reviews)

    $$

    I spotted this marker on the way to the beach, not home. So we were unable to make much of a…read morepurchase. I didn't want to buy any of their fresh meat as it was possible that it might spoil before it made it home. Instead, I got to enjoy the historical marker here and continue onwards. The front of the sign reads, "Burrows's Service Station. This significant cultural and architectural example of a 20th-century country store was built in 1937 by Theron Burrows (1910-1973) when U.S. Hwy. 521 was finished from Georgetown to Manning. A combination grocery and gas station with family living quarters on the second floor, it was affiliated with Esso (now Exxon) and had the motto "we serve the needs of the neighborhood."" And on the reverse, "Cooper's Country Store. Burrows's Service Station sold not only staple goods, fresh meat, and produce, but also clothing, farm supplies, hardware, feed and seed, and automotive products and parts. After Burrows died in 1973 his son-in-law George Cooper bought the business, renaming it "Cooper's Country Store;" it now boasts several second- and third-generation employees and customers." This is marker number 45-13 and it was erected in 2001 by the Williamsburg Historical Society. [Review 1887 of 2024 - 1138 in South Carolina - 22909 overall]

    I drove 40 miles to see if all the talk about this place was true or not. This was one of the…read moredirtiest places that sell food that I've ever been in. People working there were like zombies. Since I made the trip to get there, I decided to at least try the BBQ. Got a pound to bring home and it is absolutely the worst I've ever had in my entire life. Not sure what the folks who wrote the articles in Southern Living and Garden & Gun magazines were smoking but I'd sure like to have some of that stuff.

    Dollar General - grocery - Updated May 2026

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