My first serious drink-induced vomming was on cider and sherry at the age of 16. I either chose very well, or very poorly.... that said, I rarely touch spirits thesedays. Beer and wine is about the sum of it. Last hard drink i had was Finnish Koskenkorva vodka at our neighbourhood summer party. It's fantastic stuff, v smooth and delicious cold and neat, but gets you completely ****ed up. I'm glad i didn't discover it in my youth....
The driver is asking for a £60.00 cleaning charge..I'm in two minds to tell him to shove it up his arse..
Pretty standard mate. Wouldnt blame him. Doubt he wants to clean sick up too much. I've been there and told them to **** off mind, mainly while still drunk. Depends what they have in terms of details and how they can chase it. Possibly a lesson for your kid to learn there too. Depends how you look at it.
If somebody dumped my 16 year old, at a service station, miles from home. I'd be inclined to tell him where to shove that £60. If he had brought your son home, then yeah, of course you should pay. He can't have it both ways, though.
He was looked after well at the service station so not upset with that one..However, I dare bet that he has just cleaned it up himself while the people were at the game so think £60.00 is a bit of a piss take..
All due respect I don't think it's out of order from them. Pretty standard thing across taxis's and bus companies. Suppose if you get him to pay the £60 himself it teaches him a wee lesson.
Give your son the bill. Or offer his cleaning services to the taxi company, in return. Taking responsibility for his actions.
You should pay the £60, Whitey Imagine that it was you that had to clean it up after somebody else . . . . it's a horrible job that deserves to be well paid
Tell your son it's a £100 cleaning bill, he won't check... Hey presto £40 profit for you. You can thank me later.