In order for this page to print correctly, you need to 
scroll to the bottom of the page, then right click and choose "Print".
Printing without scrolling will result in the webs.com ad blocking part of the list.

FOR THIS PAGE TO PRINT CORRECTLY :
SCROLL TO THE BOTTOM OF THE PAGE,
RIGHT CLICK AND CHOOSE PRINT.
If you don't scroll to the bottom,
you'll have the webs.com ad in your list.

Click here to edit subtitle

SAFE FOODS
Vegetables: Wash thoroughly
Asparagus
Bean sprouts
Bell pepper
Broccoli
Carrots
Celery
Cooked potato
Corn
Cucumber
Green beans
Kale
Spinach

Fruits: Wash thoroughly
Apples, NO seeds
Bananas
Blackberries
Blueberries
Cantaloupe
Coconut
Cherry
Honeydew
Papaya
Peaches, NO pit
Pears
Plum, NO pit
Starfruit
Strawberries
Tomatoes, ripe in very small amounts
Watermelon, in very small amounts.

Proteins:
Boiled egg
Meal worms, sparingly
Grasshoppers, NOT wild
Crickets, NOT wild
Cooked plain salmon
Cooked plain chicken
Tofu,
Yogurt, plain non fat

Nuts, Seeds, Beans: always plain
Cashews
Flaxseed
Millet
Peanut, unsalted & roasted
Pumpkin seeds
Sesame seeds
Soybeans, cooked plain
Sunflower seeds
Walnuts

Grains:
Corn, pasta or plain cereal
Oats, plain dry
Quinoa, cooked
Rice, brown cooked
Wheat, pasta or plain cereal

Plants and herbs:
Chamomile
Clover
Dandelion
Grass, organic grown
Oat grass, also called pet grass
Parsley
Raspberry leaves
Strawberry leaf
Timothy hay, fresh.
Watercress
Wheat grass



UNSAFE FOODS

Almonds
Apple Seeds
Apricot Stone
Avocado
Caffeine
Canned food that use salt,sugar
Candy and sweets
Carbonated beverages
Cherry stone/pit
Chips
Chives
Citrus fruit - all
Chocolate
Egg plant
Fool's Parsley
Fried foods
Garlic
Grape seeds
High fat foods, including red   meat
Iceberg lettuce
Jams and Jelly
Leeks
Lemon
Lime
Oranges
Onions
Peach stone/pit
Pickled food
Pork products
Potato (raw)
Raw beans
Raw rhubarb
Scallions
Spices
Sugary food or drinks
Tangerines
Tomato leaves, stems, and unripe tomatoes
Watermelon, in excess. foods with high water content  may cause diarrhea in some well   animals

SAFE WOOD
*bake any wood from outside*
Apple
Alder berry (red & white)
Ash (no seeds)
Aspen
Bamboo (NOT "lucky bamboo")
Balsa
Basswood
Birch (see notes)
Chinese Dogwood
Chinese Fir (chew toys)
Chinese Gooseberry
Crab Apple
Cork (natural, not from wine bottles)
Cottonwood
Dogwoods
Driftwood
Elm
Grape/ Grapevine
Hawthorn (no thorns)
Hazelnut
Hemp ( bedding, etc)
Horse Apple
Java
Kiwi
Lychee
Magnolia
Mangrove 
Manzanita
Mulberry
Oak
Pear
Pecan
Pine, kiln dried (don't use   shavings as bedding - this   refers to decoration/building   material)
Pinecones, washed, dried, baked
Poplar
Ribbon wood
Rowan berry
Rubber Wood
Sycamore
Willow; Goat, Weeping, or Pussy


**Birch Note**

Birch- several varieties are safe, White, grey, broadleaf, silver and common birch wood are regarded as safe to use.
But others can be quite dangerous, so if in doubt it’s best left alone. The leaves and bark contain salicylates and substances with haemolytic properties (destroy red blood cells). Salicylate concentrations are however very low

UNSAFE WOODS
(or plants)
Apricot
Alder Buckthorn
Almond
Birch (see notes)
Black Locust
Black Wood
Box Elder
Box Wood
Cannabis (although hemp products like bedding are safe)
Cashew
Cedar (whole or shavings)
Cherry
Chestnut
Chinese Snake Tree
Chokeberry 
Citrus tree wood (ALL)
Cypress
Devil's Walking Stick
Ebony
Elderberry Bushes
Eucalyptus
Fir
Hemlock
Hercules' Club
Hydrangea
Holly
Hornbeam
Iroko
Ironwood 
Juniper
Katon
Kauri
Kentucky coffee tree
Larch
Laurel
Mahogany
Manufactured wood, such as   Plywood, Press board,   Chipboard, MDF fiberboard,   hard board, etc because of   the glues used to bind the   wood/pulp
Maple
Mopani, although some use it.
Nectarine 
Myrtle
Peach
Pine - fresh cut, pressure treated, or fresh pinecones 
Plum
Poison Ivy or Oak
Prune
Red Maple
Redwood -all
Rhododendron
Rimu
Rosewood
Satinwood
Sandalwood
Sequoia
Spruce
Sugi
Tallow
Teak
Willow, except those listed as   safe
Yew

The information on this page should be used as a guide only, is not exhaustive and has been gathered from various sites throughout the internet. I am not a vet and if you have any questions about the safety of any food or wood for your hamster, please seek vet assistance. Thanks ♥