Calf milk poweder is for baby cows that, for some reason, can not nurse from there mother. Calf milk powder is the same to a cow as formula is to an infant.
All cows (those female bovines that have had at least 1 calf) produce milk, whether it's for human consumption or not. However, "dry cows" are cows that do not produce milk, whether they are bred or open and don't have a calf at side.
when a cow has a calf she gives milk for as long as the calf needs it which is about a year, though it will vary between breeds and between individual animals and until you breed her back and she has another calf will she then produce milk again.
Yes, usually.
All cows (mature female bovines) produce milk.
Because people milk them. Same stimulation as if a calf was sucking the teat.
Calf milk poweder is for baby cows that, for some reason, can not nurse from there mother. Calf milk powder is the same to a cow as formula is to an infant.
LOL they're the same cows, only thing is that the "colostrum milk cows" are those cows that have just given birth to a new calf. Colostrum flows for 24 to 48 hours, before the milk in their udders "converts" into "real" milk that we drink.
No, only the "female cows" do. Male "cows" are not cows. They are bulls or steers, which do not produce milk. Female bovines that have had a calf (or at least two) are called cows and those cows produce milk. Young female bovines that have not had a calf are called heifers, and they are not able to produce milk because they have not had a calf yet.
Cows only give milk if they have a calf. If the cow is not bred, no milk. I think the same for women, so you can't.
Yes. As mammals, cows do have hair/fur and produce milk for their young. The milk forms in the cow's udder and is available to the calf/calves at any of the four teats.
A calf would drink the milk direct from a cows udder, or it can be fed the milk from a bottle, but you can not put the milk back into the udder.