Let's talk about the money here. Have I made it clear yet, that this is a NATO base with mostly Americans, but there are plenty of people from lots of other places? Yeah. French, British, Australia, Canadian, and various contingents from a smattering of other countries all coexist on this one base. Many of these contingents have their own stores, DFACs (Dining Facilities), living quarters, etc.
As far as I can tell American money is the way to go here. I haven't been to a PX (Post Exchange - it's basically just army for: "store that the army sets up on a base") that lists prices in any other currency. The Kandahar American PX is relatively large for Afghanistan for good reason as this is a very large base. That's if you compare it to other PXs - in Germany we were at one that was literally the size of a Walmart or a Target.
Anyway, the PX is normally pretty busy. I hear they're the only place on the base that accepts $100 dollar bills which is ironic because the only ATMs available here dispense only $100 bills. They also accept Eagle Cash which is sort of a debit card for the army.
When you are owed change from the PX checkout that is not in denominations of just whole dollars (nearly every time you check out), you aren't given it in coins. Instead, AAFES (Army and Air Force Exchange System) came up with a different solution for Iraq and Afghanistan PXs. What we get are pogs. Remember pogs? Little cardboard coin-shaped collectibles? Fad from the mid-90s? I've got about 500 of them sitting in a drawer in my bedroom in Cleveland? Ringing any bells? There's even a webpage of the different series of AAFES pogs issues over the last 10 years on this numismatics website.
Here's what they look like |
Excuse me, may I please pay for my new Nintendo DS with this orange 500? |
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