Hi IshKah:
I really don't see what all the hoopla is all about. Your diet seems fine to me:
"Diet: Bok choy, endive, escarole, cilantro, occasionally carrots, mustard greens, dandelion greens, basil. All rotated frequently and bought fresh weekly from a certified organic farm."
The endive, escarole and dandelion are excellent food items. To this diet you can take the scissors and a plastic bag out into the yard and find mullberry leaves, opuntia cactus, grape leaves, holly hock leaves, clover, broad-leafed weeds like fillaree...anything out there that you think he might like to eat that hasn't been treated with herbicides or pesticides.
Carolinapetsupply.com has an excellent product that you sprinkle over the food. Its called TNT and its made up of nutritious plants that are dried and ground up into a powder.
And, by the way, it was Xero who suggested the OP join SW, and Maggie's comment was directed to Xero.
I really don't see what all the hoopla is all about. Your diet seems fine to me:
"Diet: Bok choy, endive, escarole, cilantro, occasionally carrots, mustard greens, dandelion greens, basil. All rotated frequently and bought fresh weekly from a certified organic farm."
The endive, escarole and dandelion are excellent food items. To this diet you can take the scissors and a plastic bag out into the yard and find mullberry leaves, opuntia cactus, grape leaves, holly hock leaves, clover, broad-leafed weeds like fillaree...anything out there that you think he might like to eat that hasn't been treated with herbicides or pesticides.
Carolinapetsupply.com has an excellent product that you sprinkle over the food. Its called TNT and its made up of nutritious plants that are dried and ground up into a powder.
And, by the way, it was Xero who suggested the OP join SW, and Maggie's comment was directed to Xero.