Okay, I think you might be right there. Thankyou for the help, appreciate itThe top two look like Columbine, which is a NO according to the Tortoise table.
The bottom one looks like it might be annual Geranium (botanically, it's actually Pelargonium) which is a 'feed in moderation' plant.
BOTH ARE VERY TENTATIVE ID's. You need to see the flowers to be certain about a lot of this stuff, especially garden plants which can be from anywhere in the world and throws the 'it doesn't grow here rule' out the window.
Link to the Tortoise Table in case you're not familiar with it:
https://www.thetortoisetable.org.uk/index.php
I have lived in my house for 15 years. Columbine grows wild all over, and blooms pink in the spring. I have had Sulcata in my habitats for 15 years. When I moved here from Calif, I did not care/know about them, so I have Sulcata grazing and eating Columbine all these years. really?I agree as well with the IDs. Columbine & the last one Geranium.
The Tortoise table is very conservative with their list of what is safe to eat. Columbine gets a red flag based on this:I have lived in my house for 15 years. Columbine grows wild all over, and blooms pink in the spring. I have had Sulcata in my habitats for 15 years. When I moved here from Calif, I did not care/know about them, so I have Sulcata grazing and eating Columbine all these years. really?
This plant contains cyanogenic glycoside and although there are no cases of poisoning in either human or animal, it would be best avoided. The plant's seeds and roots are highly poisonous and contain cardiogenic toxins which cause both severe gastroenteritis and heart palpitations in humans if eaten.