Madkins007 said:The flowers are empty calories but seem tasty.
The leaves are very low in calcium, but even lower in phosphorous. OK in fiber, etc.
The calyx- green part of the flower, is LOADED with calcium and nutrients.
Overall, a good plant, plenty of roughage, a good part of a balanced, varied, diet.
Madkins007 said:The flowers are empty calories but seem tasty.
The leaves are very low in calcium, but even lower in phosphorous. OK in fiber, etc.
The calyx- green part of the flower, is LOADED with calcium and nutrients.
Overall, a good plant, plenty of roughage, a good part of a balanced, varied, diet.
Redfoot NERD said:Madkins007 said:The flowers are empty calories but seem tasty.
The leaves are very low in calcium, but even lower in phosphorous. OK in fiber, etc.
The calyx- green part of the flower, is LOADED with calcium and nutrients.
Overall, a good plant, plenty of roughage, a good part of a balanced, varied, diet.
You know I've often wondered who put those stats together?! If they are so "empty" in everything.. then why do my hatchlings do so well on them as their staple diet? And they don't eat the so-called "best" part! How do we explain that Mark?
NERD
N2TORTS said:Hibiscus flowers contain chemical agents that help to maintain health or prevent diseases. These ingredients have been named nutraceuticals .The information your asking about is the chemical composition of the hibiscus flower and its nutraceutical potential. There are many phenolic components present in Hibiscus with nutraceutical implications. . . Individual phenolic compounds present in plants differ in their structural complexity but mainly as natural antioxidants. The phenolics identified belongued to the flavonoids (anthocyanins, procyanidins, cathechins, epicathechins) and cinnamates. Also the flowers are known to contain chemicals known as anthocyanins, which have been shown to improve the functioning of blood vessels and strengthen the protein collagen, which helps give structure to cells and tissues, including blood vessels.
“ TWO GREEN THUMBS ARE BETTER THAN ONEâ€Â
JD~![]()
Redfoot NERD said:N2TORTS said:Hibiscus flowers contain chemical agents that help to maintain health or prevent diseases. These ingredients have been named nutraceuticals .The information your asking about is the chemical composition of the hibiscus flower and its nutraceutical potential. There are many phenolic components present in Hibiscus with nutraceutical implications. . . Individual phenolic compounds present in plants differ in their structural complexity but mainly as natural antioxidants. The phenolics identified belongued to the flavonoids (anthocyanins, procyanidins, cathechins, epicathechins) and cinnamates. Also the flowers are known to contain chemicals known as anthocyanins, which have been shown to improve the functioning of blood vessels and strengthen the protein collagen, which helps give structure to cells and tissues, including blood vessels.
“ TWO GREEN THUMBS ARE BETTER THAN ONEâ€Â
JD~![]()
.. I doubt I'm the only one - sorry.![]()
Jeff does all of that mean it builds strong bones and big muscals???
NERD
Redfoot NERD said:Madkins007 said:The flowers are empty calories but seem tasty.
The leaves are very low in calcium, but even lower in phosphorous. OK in fiber, etc.
The calyx- green part of the flower, is LOADED with calcium and nutrients.
Overall, a good plant, plenty of roughage, a good part of a balanced, varied, diet.
You know I've often wondered who put those stats together?! If they are so "empty" in everything.. then why do my hatchlings do so well on them as their staple diet? And they don't eat the so-called "best" part! How do we explain that Mark?
NERD
N2TORTS said:Hibiscus flowers contain chemical agents that help to maintain health or prevent diseases. These ingredients have been named nutraceuticals .The information your asking about is the chemical composition of the hibiscus flower and its nutraceutical potential. There are many phenolic components present in Hibiscus with nutraceutical implications. . . Individual phenolic compounds present in plants differ in their structural complexity but mainly as natural antioxidants. The phenolics identified belongued to the flavonoids (anthocyanins, procyanidins, cathechins, epicathechins) and cinnamates. Also the flowers are known to contain chemicals known as anthocyanins, which have been shown to improve the functioning of blood vessels and strengthen the protein collagen, which helps give structure to cells and tissues, including blood vessels.
“ TWO GREEN THUMBS ARE BETTER THAN ONEâ€Â
JD~![]()
N2TORTS said:Redfoot NERD said:N2TORTS said:Hibiscus flowers contain chemical agents that help to maintain health or prevent diseases. These ingredients have been named nutraceuticals .The information your asking about is the chemical composition of the hibiscus flower and its nutraceutical potential. There are many phenolic components present in Hibiscus with nutraceutical implications. . . Individual phenolic compounds present in plants differ in their structural complexity but mainly as natural antioxidants. The phenolics identified belongued to the flavonoids (anthocyanins, procyanidins, cathechins, epicathechins) and cinnamates. Also the flowers are known to contain chemicals known as anthocyanins, which have been shown to improve the functioning of blood vessels and strengthen the protein collagen, which helps give structure to cells and tissues, including blood vessels.
“ TWO GREEN THUMBS ARE BETTER THAN ONEâ€Â
JD~![]()
.. I doubt I'm the only one - sorry.![]()
Jeff does all of that mean it builds strong bones and big muscals???
NERD
Yup! ...remember Herpetology and Horticulture ...both start with the Letter "H" ... ...pssss... thats the 8th one!
Maybe I should write an article on it ?
Do you even have hibiscus in Tenn?
Madkins007 said:Redfoot NERD said:Madkins007 said:The flowers are empty calories but seem tasty.
The leaves are very low in calcium, but even lower in phosphorous. OK in fiber, etc.
The calyx- green part of the flower, is LOADED with calcium and nutrients.
Overall, a good plant, plenty of roughage, a good part of a balanced, varied, diet.
You know I've often wondered who put those stats together?! If they are so "empty" in everything.. then why do my hatchlings do so well on them as their staple diet? And they don't eat the so-called "best" part! How do we explain that Mark?
NERD
Stats come from people who test the plants according to standards, just like they test carrots, etc. Since Hibiscus is used as a food, they have done the research.
Your guys don't eat the calyx? I thought you had said they did before? They may just not like the taste of them. I bet the flowers are the tastiest part!
Your guys do well because you feed a decent diet without over-emphasis on any one food, and because tortoises are probably one of the best-designed animals on Earth to do great on a very low-nutrient diet. Wild tortoises do just fine on diets much lower in nutrients than what we offer.
Hibiscus is fine, just not perfect. Its not empty in everything, just low in calcium in the leaves and flower. It still offers carbs, fiber, protein, vitamins, trace minerals, etc.
Redfoot NERD said:Mark I would like to read these stats also.. would you post the source please?
Your guys don't eat the calyx? I thought you had said they did before?
The 'base' of the flower is always left.. the hatchlings don't eat them, although the others [ '08's and older ] do! I just toss what's left to them.
Your guys do well because you feed a decent diet without over-emphasis on any one food
The emphasis IS on the hibiscus blooms and leaves with a few dandelion thrown in maybe every other day!
I took these pics yesterday - I think this shows they like them [ 2 different May '10 hatchlings ] -
![]()
![]()
But the little mooches don't eat that other part! I won't read those stats to them. Do they look like they're doing O.K.?
Wild tortoises do just fine on diets much lower in nutrients than what we offer.
Can't disagree with that a bit Mark. Maybe 'we' keepers would learn from that and not "over-think" or get too "scientific" in our approach to maintaining these magnificent creatures........... huh??? How about "less is best" ?
NERD
Madkins007 said:Redfoot NERD said:Mark I would like to read these stats also.. would you post the source please?
Your guys don't eat the calyx? I thought you had said they did before?
The 'base' of the flower is always left.. the hatchlings don't eat them, although the others [ '08's and older ] do! I just toss what's left to them.
Your guys do well because you feed a decent diet without over-emphasis on any one food
The emphasis IS on the hibiscus blooms and leaves with a few dandelion thrown in maybe every other day!
I took these pics yesterday - I think this shows they like them [ 2 different May '10 hatchlings ] -
![]()
![]()
But the little mooches don't eat that other part! I won't read those stats to them. Do they look like they're doing O.K.?
Wild tortoises do just fine on diets much lower in nutrients than what we offer.
Can't disagree with that a bit Mark. Maybe 'we' keepers would learn from that and not "over-think" or get too "scientific" in our approach to maintaining these magnificent creatures........... huh??? How about "less is best" ?
NERD
Yeesh. Here we go again.
This time- YOU post something that shows actual values of the leaves as something good. Something that shows where they got the information and posts actual values, not just the Ca: P or restating some other sites undocumented info.
While we are at it, will you be changing the '09 diet revision' on Turtletary.com to reflect that emphasis on hibiscus and dandelion?
"Less is more" is a great philosophy on life. It is a less great dietary program. Wild Red-foots select from hundreds of foods. Most of us only have access to a couple dozen. Limiting food choices limits nutrients.
Considering the long-term, hidden effects of poor nutrition- poor organ and skeletal development, several forms of inflammation disorders, poor reproductive success, etc., that's a pretty big gamble that can be easily avoided by just following your suggestion on your caresheet: "...variety is good no doubt.."