Timberland's Earthkeepers 2.0 Make Conventional Boots Cower In Eco-Shame
I'm not much of a fashion maven, but I really appreciate that more conventional manufacturers are rethinking how they can create more sustainable products.
I was always taught that you should buy things that are well constructed so that they last a long time, and while those words made sense, I was broke for most of my young adult life so those pearls of wisdom just went in one ear and out the other.

One thing I always did pine away for was a pair of genuine Doc Martens, but again, I couldn't even rub two nickels together...so what did I do?
I bought a pair of cheap @$$ knockoffs which ended up falling apart in one year. I sure wish I had listened to my mother.

Well, look at these puppies...they certainly have a Doc-esque feel to them, don't they? Made by Timberland, they aren't just well constructed, they're also incredibly green.
Dubbed "Earthkeepers 2.0," 80% of these boots can be recycled -- in fact, once you've beaten them up into oblivion, you can just return them to the manufacturer and they will reuse the materials in the following ways:
- Their Dominican Republic factory will refurbish the leather.
- The green rubber soles -- made with tire waste -- will be returned to their Georgia rubber recycling facility, where they will be melted down and remolded into new Timberland outsoles.
- Any metal hardware on the shoes will be reused or recycled.
- The polyester lining will be recycled into new polyester products.
Craftsmanship like this, along with the sustainable edge, does come at a price -- in this case $160 -- but Doc Martens are hovering over the $100 mark as are so many other conventionally made boots, so it seems like a reasonable investment not just in style but in sound business practices.





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