This is something I’ve wondered about after my last couple of trips to the grocery store. I’m walking on floors that other people have walked on, in footwear that has been in homes where the coronavirus may or may not be present.
Is the possibility a realistic one that the soles of my shoes might be picking up the coronavirus from the floor that we all are walking on, or am I being paranoid?
People say I’m crazy, I’ve got virus on the soles of my shoes,
that’s one way to lose these walking blues…
Yes. You’ve got a ton of bacteria on your soles, and you may have virus there, too. But so what? Unless you’re licking your floors (Mmm, maple tongue’n’groove…), you’re ok.
Now, if you have pets who might bring that onto furniture, change shoes. We’ve been changing shoes and washing coats after venturing into grocery stores.
Or sitting on the floor while playing a game of cards with the Firebug, or lying on the floor while watching TV…yeah, no way it could get on my clothes, and then on my hands when I touch my clothes?
We’ve got cats, yes. Who can catch the virus as well as merely transporting it. And who like to hang out on the carpet just inside the door. And of course I may need to walk there later.
So even though I take off my shoes after coming inside, there are still multiple opportunities for me or the Firebug or the cats to bring the virus from the floor near the basement door where I come in, to other parts of the house, assuming it’s gotten in with me in the first place.
I know what I step in. I needn’t (as I did in NYC) walk along with my head down, kicking dog turds from my path - a characteristic step there. Out here in the boonies I can use my tired eyes to avoid deer shit in our meadow and forest, bear poop occasionally on our front porch, and fungal growths spreading from downed wood. And as always, avoid wet puddles - ya never know how deep they are.
Fun and pointless story about not knowing what you’re stepping in: a few weeks ago when the beaches were still open, my husband and I took a long barefoot walk on Redondo beach and realized only after we got home that the soles of our feet were black with tar. Oil bubbles up from the sea floor, causing tar to wash ashore occasionally, but in all my years living here I’d yet to encounter it. The tar can be visible on the sand, but on that day it wasn’t. It took a lot of scrubbing to get it off our feet, and even more to get the tub cleaned up afterward.
We are a shoe-free household and shoes rarely make it past a specific area around the front door or the door to the garage. That, and the limited active lifetime of the coronavirus on most surfaces (typically two days or less) pretty much makes it a non-issue. If that’s not your household custom, now would be a good time to make it one, IMO, but it’s not something I would obsess over.
I can see that having animals that might track it around the house or onto furniture might be a minor concern, but the amount of virus would likely be very small and, again, relatively short-lived. Unlike insect pests or bacteria, viruses can’t reproduce outside a host, so they’re going to go inactive rather than multiply. Obviously all recommended hygiene precautions like hand-washing should be followed, but the path from the soles of your shoes to infection seems an unlikely one.