They will improve your health and enrich your life
Doing so won't kill you, but they may not taste very nice.
Yellow collards are fine to eat. If the same collards used to be green, then it would be a risky move. It could result in digestive cramping or otherwise because the food has begun to spoil.
No, you will not want to eat the collard greens that are starting to turn yellow. Only eat the greens that are a nice dark green color.
yes
There is Eighty percent organic matter in collard greens. This is a leaf that you can eat.
Collard greens hold 80% organic matter. This is green leaf that you can eat.
because they are not healthy for you mustard greens a better
Horses can eat collard greens, but they should only be given less than 4 ounces per day. This also goes for cabbage, kale, chard, and broccoli.
Aphids, beetles, grasshoppers, harlequin bugs, moths, thrips and weevils are insects that eat collard greens. Beetles include blister, flea, white-fringed and yellow-margined leaf beetles. Moths range from beet armyworms to black and granulate cutworms, cabbage loopers and worms, cross-striped cabbageworms, and diamondback moths.
Some do, but others think it is gross!
Since humans eat turnip greens, I am sure that goats would enjoy them too. They are also extremely nutritious.
All Dragon's eat the same thing. For protein there are crickets, roaches, dubai's and even pinkie mice for treats when their older. For veggies and greens there are Alfalfa sprouts, collard greens, dandelion greens, squash, turnip greens, blueberries, carrots, apples
They eat dark leafy greens like endive, escarole, bok choy, collard greens, and dandelion greens. Broccoli, spinach, cabbage, kale and parsley are no-no's. Also feed a cricket or two every two weeks.
All Dragon's eat the same thing. For protein there are crickets, roaches, dubai's and even pinkie mice for treats when their older. For veggies and greens there are Alfalfa sprouts, collard greens, dandelion greens, squash, turnip greens, blueberries, carrots, apples