Good diet

Mosin

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What should a good Russian tortoise diet look like
 

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Golden Greek Tortoise 567

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Mainly full of weeds and flowers like hibiscus, clover, plantain, petunias, pansies, dandelions, forsythia, corn flowers, mallow, optunia cactus pads, rose flowers, escarole, endive, Henbit, sedum, and hosta. There are many more,
 

Tom

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Feeding:
So much contradictory info on this subject. Its simple. What do they eat in the wild. Grass, weeds, leaves, flowers, and succulents. Feed them a huge variety of these things, and you'll have a healthy tortoise. All of these species are very adaptable when it comes to diet and there is a very large margin of error, and many ways to do it right. What if you don't have this sort of "natural" tortoise food available for part of each year because you are in the snow? You will have no choice but to buy grocery store food. What's wrong with grocery store food? It tends to lack fiber, some items are low in calcium or have a poor calcium to phosphorous ratio, and some items have deleterious compounds in them. All of these short comings can be improved with some simple supplementation and amendments. A pinch of calcium two times per week will help fix that problem. You can also leave cuttle bone in the enclosure, so your tortoise can self-regulate its own calcium intake. What about fiber? Soaked horse hay pellets, soaked ZooMed Grassland pellets, Mazuri tortoise chow, "Salad style", "Herbal Hay" both from @TylerStewart and his lovely wife Sarah at Tortoisesupply.com, or many of the dried plants and leaves available from Will @Kapidolo Farms. If you must use grocery store foods, favor endive and escarole as your main staples. Add in arugula, cilantro, kale, collard, mustard and turnip greens, squash leaves, spring mix, romaine, green or red leaf lettuce, butter lettuce, water cress, carrot tops, celery tops, bok choy, and whatever other greens you can find. If you mix in some of the aforementioned amendments, these grocery store foods will offer plants of variety and fiber and be able to meet your tortoises nutritional needs just fine. I find it preferable to grab a few grapevine or mulberry leaves, or a handful of mallow and clover, or some broadleaf plantain leaves and some grass, but with the right additions, grocery store stuff is fine too. Grow your own stuff, or find it around you when possible. Tyler and Sarah also sell a fantastic Testudo seed mix that is great for ALL tortoise species and also super easy to grow in pots, trays, raised garden beds, or in outdoor tortoise enclosures. When that isn't possible, add a wide variety of good stuff to your grocery store greens to make them better.
 

Mosin

Member
Joined
Apr 12, 2020
Messages
101
Location (City and/or State)
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Feeding:
So much contradictory info on this subject. Its simple. What do they eat in the wild. Grass, weeds, leaves, flowers, and succulents. Feed them a huge variety of these things, and you'll have a healthy tortoise. All of these species are very adaptable when it comes to diet and there is a very large margin of error, and many ways to do it right. What if you don't have this sort of "natural" tortoise food available for part of each year because you are in the snow? You will have no choice but to buy grocery store food. What's wrong with grocery store food? It tends to lack fiber, some items are low in calcium or have a poor calcium to phosphorous ratio, and some items have deleterious compounds in them. All of these short comings can be improved with some simple supplementation and amendments. A pinch of calcium two times per week will help fix that problem. You can also leave cuttle bone in the enclosure, so your tortoise can self-regulate its own calcium intake. What about fiber? Soaked horse hay pellets, soaked ZooMed Grassland pellets, Mazuri tortoise chow, "Salad style", "Herbal Hay" both from @TylerStewart and his lovely wife Sarah at Tortoisesupply.com, or many of the dried plants and leaves available from Will @Kapidolo Farms. If you must use grocery store foods, favor endive and escarole as your main staples. Add in arugula, cilantro, kale, collard, mustard and turnip greens, squash leaves, spring mix, romaine, green or red leaf lettuce, butter lettuce, water cress, carrot tops, celery tops, bok choy, and whatever other greens you can find. If you mix in some of the aforementioned amendments, these grocery store foods will offer plants of variety and fiber and be able to meet your tortoises nutritional needs just fine. I find it preferable to grab a few grapevine or mulberry leaves, or a handful of mallow and clover, or some broadleaf plantain leaves and some grass, but with the right additions, grocery store stuff is fine too. Grow your own stuff, or find it around you when possible. Tyler and Sarah also sell a fantastic Testudo seed mix that is great for ALL tortoise species and also super easy to grow in pots, trays, raised garden beds, or in outdoor tortoise enclosures. When that isn't possible, add a wide variety of good stuff to your grocery store greens to make them better.
I have a couple flowers in my backyard my tortoise tends to really love but otherwise a lot of my weeds are sprayed so I can’t really give him a whole lot I usually feed him grocery store food and since I think he’s relatively young I try to give him some calcium on his food every other day also I will sometimes feed him treats like cucumbers or watermelon but usually he sticks with grocery store food grass and some flowers
 

Tom

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I have a couple flowers in my backyard my tortoise tends to really love but otherwise a lot of my weeds are sprayed so I can’t really give him a whole lot I usually feed him grocery store food and since I think he’s relatively young I try to give him some calcium on his food every other day also I will sometimes feed him treats like cucumbers or watermelon but usually he sticks with grocery store food grass and some flowers
If you are going to be a tortoise owner, its time to stop spraying toxic chemicals around your house on the best tortoise foods there are.

If you are going to use grocery store greens, you need to buy and add in the amendments mentioned in the above post. Grocery store greens alone will not meet your tortoises nutritional needs, and it will eventually cause problems.
 

Mosin

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If you are going to be a tortoise owner, its time to stop spraying toxic chemicals around your house on the best tortoise foods there are.

If you are going to use grocery store greens, you need to buy and add in the amendments mentioned in the above post. Grocery store greens alone will not meet your tortoises nutritional needs, and it will eventually cause problems.
My family won’t stop spraying chemicals on the weeds though
 

Mosin

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My family won’t stop spraying chemicals on the weeds though
I’m going to see if I can buy some of the Missouri tortoise diet would that help with fiber I can also feed him Romain lettuce more often
 

Tom

The Dog Trainer
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My family won’t stop spraying chemicals on the weeds though
Then you'll need to buy the supplements to add in from Kapidolo Farms and Tortoisesupply, or find the weeds and leaves elsewhere.

Romaine is lacking in fiber. That will make this problem worse. Not better.
 

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