Yes. A lot of dairies are found in California, and most dairies have nothing but Holsteins in them, due to their high milking ability.
Holsteins are found in all states, except Alaska.
Far from it. Holsteins are very popular, and quite literally are found all over the world.
Angus cows are beef cows, not dairy cows. Holsteins are dairy cows, not beef cows, which is where we get the majority of our milk from.
Holsteins.
Holsteins are big cows and they are black and white.
Holsteins originated from Friesland, Holland.
A Holstein-Friesian cow.
On a dairy farm of course!
Black Holsteins are white with black spots, red Holsteins are white with red spots.
It's hard to say, but there's probably at least 4.5 million Holsteins in the USA.
Most dairy cows are great nurse cows. Jerseys and Holsteins are one of the more common nurse cows that can be used on beef operations to raise orphaned calves on.
No, each Holstein cow has a unique set of spots. The black and white spot pattern on Holsteins is like a fingerprint, with no two cows having the exact same patterning. This distinctiveness helps in identifying individual cows within a herd.