You know the feeling.
It's that pit-of-your-stomach sense of panic, when you realize you've lost something meaningful. It can only be matched by the relief that comes with finding that thing.
Today we're taking you on a journey through all the emotional twists and turns of searching and finding and bringing you stories of how things that are important make their way home.
Umbrellas, wallets, and airpods as far as the eye can see - it’s just a regular day at the Toronto Transit Lost Articles Office. Supervisor Justin Valmores takes us behind the scenes, and into the stories, of things left behind on public transit.
How do you catch a runaway bird? That's what Jane and Kevin Porte had to figure out when their beloved yellow Indian ringneck parrot, Chuck, flew away into the wilds of Winnipeg.
Can we help return a long lost diary? Retired New Brunswick teacher Hugh Brittain held onto a stack of old diaries from former students for decades. He's returned them all except one. Help us find the owner.
First Nations musician Kym Gouchie uses recordings of her granny’s voice and a ukulele, to record a children’s album in her ancestral language, and keep Lheidli, a local dialect of Dakelh, alive.
Colby Matthews waited two years on a list before finding A.J. Keller through the Big Brothers Big Sisters program. Now they're hunting for treasure - or at least geocashes - all over Edmonton.
When Scarlett Fonseca opened her Winnipeg mailbox one morning she had no idea she'd be part of solving a fifty-year old mystery that brought Karen Mueller a message from her deceased father.