Turtles can eat cucumbers although cucumbers are mostly made of water and have little nutritional value.
Cucumbers can also keep the turtle hydrate and you can even hide medication in the cucumber to get the turtle to take the medication.
Turtles can also eat squash, cactus, sprouts, corn, peas, carrots, mushrooms, asparagus, okra, parsnips and cooked sweet potatoes.
Turtles should have live food that make up 80 percent of their diet and dried turtle food the other remaining 20 percent of the turtles diet.
A turtles favorite meal is dark leafy greens such as collard greens, mustard greens, dandelion greens, romaine lettuce and kale.
Turtles also love aquatic plants like water hyacinth, water lilies and duckweed.
Other foods that turtles love to eat are insects such as waxworms, crickets and mealworms, pellets and cooked meats such as turkey and chicken.
A turtles favorite fruit is apples.
Other favorite fruits of turtles are pears, bananas, mango, grapes, star fruit, raisins, peaches, tomato, guava, Kiwis, berries, cantaloupe and melons.
Turtles do need a heat lamp to be able to maintain a healthy body temperature and other bodily functions.
Turtles are cold blooded animals so they rely on their environment to regulate their body temperature.
Using a heat lamp with a basking bulb for the turtle can help provide focused heat rays which can help keep the turtles basking area at the right temperature.
Turtles can feel you petting them and even when you pet the turtle on their shells.
A turtle has nerve endings in their shells that are made of keratin, which is the same material as human fingernails.
The nerve endings in a turtles shell are sensitive to pressure from touch and so they can feel pain and touch through their shells.
Turtles sun together to get warm as they are cold blooded.
The sunlight on the turtles also helps the turtle to develop vitamin D for their health and the sun also dries the turtles shells to ward off any parasites.
Baby turtles do not find their moms because once the eggs are laid and they hatch the baby turtle are left on their own as the mother turtles job is considered done and the baby turtles care for themselves.
Turtles do talk in their own way and through a diverse repertoire of vocal sounds.
Turtles sleep for several hours at a time and baby turtles sleep between 19 hours to 22 hours a day and adult turtles tend to sleep 10 to 12 hours a day.
Turtles do not have any teeth but they have powerful and oddly shaped beaks that help them eat.
Some turtles also have serrated ridges along the inside of their beaks which simulate teeth and they use the sharp edges to tear seagrasses apart and scrape algae from hard surfaces in the ocean.
Turtles on the land use the serrated ridges and sharp edges to chew and cut through the food they eat.
Turtles do hear good and have higher hearing thresholds than other reptiles do with the best frequencies being 500 Hz.
Turtles that are in the water also have lower underwater hearing thresholds than those in the air as a result of resonance of the middle ear cavity.
Turtles have very good memories and turtles have also mastered a trick to obtain food as a reward at young ages.
The turtle will instantly remember how to get the same result with the trick.
Turtles also remember their owners and people that have been around them.
Turtles sleep anywhere they can find a safe and comfortable place to sleep such as in rock piles, submerged tree stumps, in brush, tall grass, under wood piles or other structures.
Sea turtles and aquatic turtles usually sleep on a dry dock or with their head poking out of the water although they may also sleep underwater for shorter periods of time and come up to take a breath when needed.
Baby turtles do not find it's mom after the eggs have been laid.
Once the turtle has laid the eggs the mother does not care for the baby turtles and returns to her habitat.
The young baby turtles are then completely on their own and independent from the moment they hatch.
A turtle cry will typically sound like little meows.
The IQ of a turtle is not really known although they are thought to have a very high IQ as turtles are very smart and show both learned intelligence and instinctual intelligence.
It does not hurt a turtle to pick it up by its shell as their shell is hard enough so they won't feel much of anything.
However when trying to pick up a turtle it may bite so it's best to not pick up a turtle unless it's your pet turtle.
If you put a turtle on it's back the turtle will have a hard time breathing and be prone to exhaustion and overheating and when left on it's back it can die.
A turtle can go up to 7 days without eating although the turtle cannot survive longer than a day without water.
Inactive adult turtles however can last up to 6 months without food when they are in hibernation as the turtles metabolism preserves the energy from their last meal to help the turtle stay alive.
Turtle shells are not bulletproof although they are hard enough to protect the turtle from predators but even some animals can bite through and break a turtles shell.
Animals that can break a turtle's shell are alligators, coyotes, raccoons, weasels, hawks and crocodiles.