SEATTLE (AP)
-- To Laura King, her three children were acting normal while enjoying
dinner at an Italian restaurant in their hometown in Washington state.
But
staffers of the restaurant Sogno di Vino in Poulsbo were so impressed
with her children's table manners during their Feb. 1 dinner that they
thanked her kids and gave the family of five a bowl of ice cream.
It
wasn't until King got home that that she noticed a $4 "well behaved
kids" discount on her receipt to cover the dessert. A friend posted a
picture of the receipt on the website Reddit, and the story took off.
"The server said staff didn't even know there were kids at the table," said King, whose children are 2, 3, and 8 years old.
King
said it's been entertaining to see all the attention her story has
gotten, and she plans to dine at Sogno di Vino again soon.
Sogno
di Vino owner Rob Scott said servers have the discretion to offer a
discount to customers, adding that this wasn't the first time
well-behaved kids have been rewarded. What was different this time was
that one of the staffers wrote it out in the receipt.
"It was just an act of kindness," Scott said.
Scott
said the restaurant was packed the night Laura's family came in, which
can be challenging to families with small children. But he said he was
impressed with the way the family was interacting with each other and
that even the 2-year-old on a high chair seemed to be having a good
time.
Rowdy children are an issue all restaurant customers have encountered at one point or another, Scott said.
"You
can tell when a (family) had a rough ride to the restaurant," Scott
said. "There tends to be sometimes activities where children get out of
the chair or stand on chairs or get loud, as they get loud, it upsets
other patrons, and they paid for a baby sitter."
Scott said he's been asked if he would charge more to customers who have unruly children. That's not something he does, he said.
"Everybody
in my generation was raised to behave in restaurants," he said. "That
parenting skills have been forgotten in some cases."
King
said she has worked in the restaurant industry before and knows that
families aren't the easiest customers to serve. She said that at the
restaurant, her kids apply the table etiquette used at her dining table.
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