Is this for an adult? I just had to ask because I used to do this for Jada when she was younger but now she is almost 7 months old and she quit eating her salads until I upped the size of greens. So now I have to hand or scissor cut her salads. :shock: I would much rather use my processor. I spoon feed Magick and Semi salads like what you posted but they are just plain spoiled so I plan on making Jada eat hers on her own.
Yep, it's for 3 adults and 1 juvie. lol They're spoiled. If I give them bigger chunks they won't eat it. If I make it any smaller they won't eat it... :roll: See a trend with my kids?
Jaderose":c50ae said:
Mistyck":c50ae said:
It's not a secret. Collards, zucchini and mustard greens. Use a mini chopper and there ya go.
I'm definately going to try this. I've always hand cut all of Falcor's salads, and its quite the pain, plus he will pick around his veggies and whatnot eating only the greens.... Thanks for the great idea!
Well I whipped up a collard greens/zucchini masterpiece for Godzilla and low and behold he devoured the whole thing....but the little smartass was able to eat around/under/over and to the side of all the calcium powder hahaha..
That looks so good that I might just have to share it with Breyas. (Seperate bowls, of course.) I'v always just torn the greens by hand and haven't been able to get him eat any other kind of plant matter. I'll have to try the chopper. Maybe I'll get some squash in him yet.
To those who haven't heard of them, collards and turnip greens, like okra, are a southern mainstay. Mustard greens give them more zing. You need to cook them with a big old ham bone for the best flavor for humans, but beardies love them in the raw!
This is what I try to feed her. A mixture of finely cut dandelion, mustard, collard, endive, escarole, grated parsnip, and butternut squash. The white stuff is parsnip and the orange stuff is butternut squash. She loves this stuff. That's what I try to prepare for her. The parsnips are really good for her...very high in protein and low in calcium oxalate...even lower than the dandelion green, which is the best green to feed really. The butternut squash add color and is a good color enhancer, plus it got a lot of carbohydrate, too.
You should try using the butternut squash like I do. It's much healthier than carrots. Carrots are fine on occasion, but they really contain too much calcium oxalate the stuff that binds with calcium and render useless to your dragon. Mine loves butternut squash. The squash gives it that orange color like carrots do and it brings out the color like it, too.
You should try using the butternut squash like I do. It's much healthier than carrots. Carrots are fine on occasion, but they really contain too much calcium oxalate the stuff that binds with calcium and render useless to your dragon. Mine loves butternut squash. The squash gives it that orange color like carrots do and it brings out the color like it, too.
They do not like squash and they get carrots in their salad every other week. I'll just stick to what they like, and not try to jack them up too much by putting things they don't like in their salads.
Have you try cooking my microwaving until it's soft? It changes the taste when you cook squash. It becomes sweeter when you do.
IT's funny I assumed yours will eat them, too. Mine will gobble up anything I put in her cage. Well, almost everything.... The only thing she doesn't is fruits. For some reason she won't touch the salad when I put fruits in it.
I've tried everything pretty much every way you can think of. They have their favorites and I stick to that. If I deviate then I have black beards for days at a time. I try to keep them happy because I don't have the patience to deal with 4 po'd dragons on top of dealing with a toddler, 2 cats, a hedgehog, a dog and a grown man who thinks he's still a child. It's just more simple for me to keep them extremely happy with everything. :lol: (They're not spoiled are they... :shock: :roll: )
Have you tried parsnips? It's one of the best veggies out there even better than dandelion. It's very high in protein and fiber. It was recommended to me by people who keep iguanas.