Turles' seed
You will find here a list of seeds to plant ideal for your turtles. Note that seeds of different sizes, large (sainfoin) to tiny (Shepherd's Purse) but that amount you roughly the same number of seeds ...
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Mixture of turtle seed - 100 gr

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Mixture adapted to the tortoises: red clover, white clover, alfafa, Sainfoin, Mache, wild chicory, wild Dandelion, vesce municipality, diverse Plantain, Mauve etc. (The seeds can vary according to the season)
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Atriplex Hortensis - Orach - 3gr

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Orach is usually grown in the vegetable garden for its tender, spinachlike leaves, but some gardeners know it as a colorful foliage plant in the flower bed.

Lapsana communis -Nipplewort - 2 gr

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It is an annual or perennial herbaceous plant growing to 1-1.2 m tall, with hairy stems and clear (not milky) sap. The leaves are spirally arranged; larger leaves at the base of the flowering stem are often pinnate, with a large oval terminal leaflet and one to four small side leaflets, while smaller leaves higher on the stem are simple oval; all leaves have a toothed margin. The flowers are yellow, produced in a capitulum 1-2 cm diameter, the capitula being numerous in loose clusters at the top of the stem

Vila tricolor - Heartsease - 1 gr

Just
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Nice flowers. Leaves and flower are eaten by turtle.
Heartsease (Viola tricolor) is a common European wild flower, growing as an annual or short-lived perennial. It has been introduced into North America, where it has spread widely, and is known as the Johnny Jump Up (though this name is also applied to similar species such as the Yellow Pansy). It is the progenitor of the cultivated Pansy, and is therefore sometimes called Wild Pansy; before the cultivated Pansies were developed, "Pansy" was an alternative name for the wild form.

Kikuyu Pennissetum clandestinum - 50 grammes

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The tropical grass species Pennisetum clandestinum is known by several common names, most often kikuyu grass, as it is native to the region of East Africa that is home to the Kĩkũyũ tribe. Because of its rapid growth and aggressive nature, it is categorised as a noxious weed in some regions. However, it is also a popular garden lawn species in Australia and South Africa because it is cheap and drought-tolerant. In addition it is useful as pasture for livestock grazing. This grass is eaten by several turtle's species as geochelone sulcata, astrochelys radiata and geochelone pardalis.