While some groceries are hard to come by during the COVID-19 pandemic, Yenda's Friendly Grocer took a different approach to ensure residents could get what they need.
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Store manager Yogesh Bhatt said staff put aside key items like hand sanitiser, disinfectant and even toilet paper in packages ready for phone orders from elderly community members and farmers making the long trip to town.
Mr Bhatt said some residents weren't comfortable dealing with large groups of people in Griffith.
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"Some people are self-isolating and they don't want to come inside, so we started doing delivers," he said.
Some customers were able to only do one shop for their groceries, helping them maintain physical distancing rules put in place by the government.
To help keep that piece of mind for the locals, Mr Bhatt extended the opening hours, and some community members got behind the village's only grocer and volunteered to help the store out.
"Some of the Yenda residents like Laurie, David Curran and Emily McKinnon helped us out as volunteers," Mr Bhatt said.
"(The store) has been a real focus for the community."
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As part-owner of the store Mr Bhatt said the store's staff had put in extra time to help out, and Mr Bhatt himself had put in a few 80 hour weeks keeping the store running during the height of the panic buying.
It's not just keeping the shelves stocked, the disinfectant used to wipe down the store every three hours during the day.
He said the shoppers visiting the store had been making sure they kept their distance, and during the worst of the panic buying, Griffith police had kept in touch.