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Gardening for tortoises
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Itort
Muddy Tort
    
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Gardening for tortoises
I've noticed that many outdoor enclosures are very functional but rather sterile and unattrative. I'm wondering with spring coming on if anyone has any suggestions on what to grow in with torts that is both attrative to the eye and good for torts. An example of this may be what I plan for my forest torts, i.e. hibiscus, hosta (attracts slugs and snails,yummy), rose bushes, bellflowers, spiderwort, elephant ear(for the burmese mountain only) and of course "weeds".
Larry
This post was last modified: 03-01-2008 05:11 PM by Itort.
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| 03-01-2008 05:10 PM |
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emysemys
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RE: Gardening for tortoises
I broadcast viola, pansy and any other type of flower seeds that I find attractive over the dirt in my box turtle pens. For the grazing tortoises, I broadcast vegetable seeds over the grass. The veggies never bear fruit because the animals eat the plants as they sprout. I have to keep the yellowfoot pen pretty humid, so I have quite a few different types of shrubs planted in their area, including a black fig tree and a banana tree. In the pens where there has to be lots of sunshine, I have old gnarled grape stumps, eucalyptus branches, large rocks or boulders as site barriers. Really, the sky's the limit.
Yvonne
Clovis Turtle & Tortoise Rescue
http://clovisturtlerescue.tripod.com/
Past President Brotogeris Society International
http://brotosociety.org/
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| 03-01-2008 06:48 PM |
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cvalda
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RE: Gardening for tortoises
good question! I would like to know this too, but add in what can be grown that is ALSO really hard to kill, 'cause I have a black thumb!
--Kelly--
http://arataday.blogspot.com
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| 03-01-2008 07:04 PM |
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josh
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RE: Gardening for tortoises
when i get enough land, i fully intend on building a mini-horse corral for my desert torts to cruise around on.
2 Desert Tortoise hatchlings
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| 03-08-2008 02:03 AM |
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Crazy1
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RE: Gardening for tortoises
Kelly the nice thing is most of the plants seeds I broadcast are like zinnia, sweet allisym, sunfloweres, poppys and panzies Just add water and you get some to grow. But none get to grow very big. The torts seems to love the new sprouts, chomp, chomp and they are down to dirt and those sporatic blades of grass again. I do grow other stuff but in planters for them. This year I am trying a grazing area outside the pen. I can place the torts in there as long as I am out there to watch them. So maybe I will get some flowers. I always thought I had a black thumb until I got my torts and found just throwing seeds and watering them got them going.
Robyn
Torts are my calming factor! Then we had eggs!
All Greeks, adults (Echo, Ajax, Rusty ), + Comet Still a hatchling & three new Greek hatchlings as of 3-24-08 (Dotsy, LB and DB) + 2 new eggs on 4-20-08, 2 dogs, Fostering 2 DT
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| 03-08-2008 09:46 AM |
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JustAnja
Tortoises are venomous right?
    
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| 03-08-2008 11:35 AM |
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Redfootedboxturtles
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RE: Gardening for tortoises
grow herbs. They grow fast and torts love them. Parsley and basil.
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| 03-08-2008 04:31 PM |
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Itort
Muddy Tort
    
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RE: Gardening for tortoises
I'm planting native grasses, prickly pear, prairie rose and native daisy type flowers in stars enclosure with three dividers to rotate grazing. In the RFs enclosure, I'm broadcasting a viola,nasturim,vegi, and bellflower mix with hosta, daylily and hibiscus plants for shelter and food. This is also to be sectioned for rotation. Of course any weeds volunteering are to be encouraged.
Larry
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| 03-08-2008 05:26 PM |
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