Vancouver woman searches for ‘Cinderfella’ who lost steel-toed Blundstone boot | CBC News


Vancouver woman searches for ‘Cinderfella’ who lost steel-toed Blundstone boot | CBC News

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A Vancouver woman has been fruitless in a search for a person for nearly a month now — despite posters put up throughout East Vancouver and a social media post.

Alanna Griffin isn’t looking for a missing person, though. She’s trying to reunite a missing steel-toed boot with its owner.

On Feb. 10, the nurse was riding her usual route to work along the Adanac Bikeway when she saw the Blundstone boot fly out of the back of a fellow cyclist’s bike carrier.

“I decided to pick up this boot, and I was very sure that I would be swift enough to catch up to this gentleman,” Griffin told CBC’s On The Coast.

“But unfortunately, this cyclist is incredibly fast. So I biked with this boot as fast as I could and couldn’t catch up … I proceeded to go on my way to work, because I had to get to work, with a boot in my hand.”

Facebook post reading: 'Found! You dropped your steel toe blundstone on adanac bike path this morning around 0820. I really tried to catch up but you are such a fast cyclist. I think you are gonna have a crappy morning at work sorry! DM me'
Alanna Griffin’s Facebook post trying to find the boot owner has been shared dozens of times. (Alanna Griffin/Facebook)

Nearly a month later, missing posters asking the boot owner to get in touch with Griffin are dotted along the Adanac Bikeway.

She said she lost sight of the owner near the Georgia Viaduct.

A Facebook post she made about the situation proved popular, getting shared dozens of times.

A woman points to a poster reading 'Did you lose your boot?'
One of the many missing posters Griffin has stuck throughout East Vancouver, as her search for the boot owner has gone on nearly a month. (Koralee Nickarz/CBC)

“I don’t have a use for one Blundstone steel-toe boot,” Griffin said.

“Also, you know, I felt like this was someone’s workwear that they probably needed to do their job and they’re expensive … I could just imagine how I would feel if I got to work, and was missing a key piece of equipment to do my job that day.”

A woman wheels her bike past a railway crossing on a rainy day.
Griffin walks past where the boot first flew out of the “Cinderfella’s” bike carrier on the Adanac Bikeway. (Koralee Nickarz/CBC)

The nurse says the men’s brown Blundstone is a size 8.5.

She said some social media posters were hoping the situation would result in the boot owner and Griffin winding up in a relationship together, nicknaming the boot owner “Cinderfella” in a nod to the classic fairy tale Cinderella.

“I am in a relationship, so I’m not available, but happy to be friends,” Griffin added.