Why I am so proud to be a Thirsties retailer!

Thirsties Cloth Diapers

Each of the diaper lines I carry for different reasons – they are all very well-performing, high-quality products that have proven themselves over time.

Thirsties is no exception.  Their products are favorites for families across the country, and I personally recommend their original diaper covers as my favorites.

I also love Thirsties because of the way they run their business.  Thirsties’ owner, Erin Kimmett, is just a fantastic person to work with.  As she has built Thirsties over the past five years, she has done it with nothing but the best business ethics.  Many Thirsties products are made by stay-at-home moms in the comfort of their own homes, allowing them to earn money while taking care of their children.  Thirsties is also the first and only manufacturer to have their hemp products milled right here in the United States, making their products entirely USA made.

Now, Thirsties is working to become a completely carbon-neutral company.  Solar panels are being installed today on their facility in Canon City, Colorado, which will cover 110% of their power needs.  Thirsties will even be able to sell some energy back to the local coal facility!

Thirsties is a company that has proven again and again that they are a fantastic company to work with, for their business ethics, high-quality products, and excellent customer service.  I congratulate them on this fantastic step!

Interested in more information?  You can read Thirsties’ entire press release below.  If you are interested in learning more about Thirsties products, check out Diaper Daisy.

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HARNESSING THE SUN:  Cloth Diaper Manufacturing Company Redefines Going Green

By Dave Kimmett  January 28, 2010

CAÑON CITY, Colorado—Among Colorado’s many natural blessings is an almost daily dose of high-intensity, high-altitude sunshine–over 300 days per year.  The kind that can burn your skin nastily if you stay out more than just a few minutes without protection, but as well the kind that makes solar panel manufacturers slobber on themselves.

Enter Erin Kimmett, founder and owner of one of America’s largest cloth diaper manufacturing and wholesale companies, Thirsties, Inc.  Long an advocate for less-impacting methods of modern living, Kimmett began Thirsties five years ago as a venture to supplement her husband’s teaching income, to find an outlet for her incessant entrepreneurial spirit, and in large part to spread the news of the wonders of cloth diapering, both as a less-expensive means of diapering and as a way to drastically cut down on the environmental consequences of the omnipresent–and in her mind dangerous–disposable diaper.

Fast-forward the five-odd years since its inception, boasting a retailer roster of over 300 stores worldwide, and through all the struggles and hardships that any small business owner witnesses, Erin is still hard at it–the all too common platitude of “being a good steward of the planet” living deeply and with resounding truth in both her life and business ethic:

  • 100% domestic manufacturing – check
  • Utilizes American-made materials – check
  • Purchases carbon credits to offset 100% of manufacturing and transport utilities – check
  • Recycling of all used cardboard and paper – check
  • 100% recycled cardboard and paper for new shipments – check

The next step is underway:  to power the entire warehouse operations with solar electricity.  And then some–enough to sell back to the local coal-burning utility!  Thirsties is presently installing a behemoth of a solar panel array, with a configuration that at full-capacity will produce enough electricity to cover more than all of the business’ needs–11 clean, sustainable, photovoltaic Kilowatts.  This equates to a total CO2 reduction of 200 tons, as if Kimmett herself is planting over 7700 trees.

Skimming past the obstacles that seemingly obstructed her path to the sun–local skepticism and regulatory hurdles, among others–Kimmett has never taken her eyes off of the prize, and is characteristically enthusiastic about steering her alternative-energy mantra to solar production.  Especially relevant to Thirsties’ ability to finance the undertaking are the present federal tax credits available to anyone installing a solar energy system – coupled with a special business installation credit – in addition to the local utility’s own solar energy rebate program, bringing a $44,000 system down to a more small-business manageable level of roughly $7000.

The solar tour de force is only adding fuel to Kimmett’s clean energy fire, complementing an already long laundry list of green practices which dominate Thirsties’ business model.  Who knows what’s next?

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