Yes. She will be pacing around, getting down and getting up, and her vulva will be red and swollen-looking. She will also start to "bag up" or produce milk, her teats will start to lengthen and have that full look to them. The biggest indicator is when the water bag has emerged out of her vulva. After the water bag appears, then feet start to appear.
She can also be known as a heifer calf, heifer yearling (if she is a year old), or first time heifer (if she has given birth to her first calf).
Heifer.
Like this:"The farmer had a prized heifer in the cattle shed.""The heifer was bred by the herd bull yesterday.""The cow gave birth to a heifer calf!""Those blasted heifers got out again!!"
A heifer.
A heifer is young female bovine that has never given birth to a calf.A heifer may be considered a cow if:She successfully gives birth and raises her second calfShe reaches adult maturity at 4 years of ageSome people consider a heifer can become a cow after she gives birth to her first calf, but for many cattle producers she is merely considered a first-calf heifer, not a cow.
You could call it a heifer, or a twin heifer if the sibling is also a heifer, or a freemartin if the heifer's sib is a bull calf.
Cow, first-calf heifer, bred heifer, heifer, heifer calf or spayed heifer. See the related question below.
Choices for personal adornment such as tattoos are as individual as the people who have them. Names, dates and zodiac signs of people who matter to you, for example: your parents, siblings, spouse, offspring or heroes, are a visible way to carry these people with you.
A young female calf from birth until she has had a calf of her own is called a heifer
An unpregnant heifer.
An "open" heifer is one that is of breeding age, and able to be bred. A "fresh" heifer is one that has recently given birth. A pregnant heifer is, well, pregnant (that's easy). A springing heifer is one who is nearing the end of her pregnancy, within a few weeks of giving birth. "Dry" is not milking and pregnant. "Close" would indicate 240 days pregnant or more. Note that the term has regional variations on the subtleties of it's meaning; so it's best to use it in the general sense only. For example, in many places "open" just means "not pregnant" and doesn't imply that she's ready to be bred.
The gender of a heifer is female.