No, not at all. If you've extended the period past the targeted 3 to 4 months that calves are usually weaned from being bottle fed, then it's not going to harm your calves at all.
Bear calves could be referred to those calves that have such thick fluffy hair that they look like little bears with four legs; these are often referred to yak calves, Highland calves, or Galloway calves, all of which are born with thick long hair. The term could be a mis-spelling of "bare calves" which may be those calves that are orphaned and are raised in a bottle or bucket by humans.
Not thicken, but you will get lovely long muscles on your thighs and calves. THis gives you a toned look, not a fat one if that is what you mean.
Only for a few days.
It's not "breast feeding". It's more or less called suckling or nursing. Calves need their mothers milk for about 3 months before they start to become more independent, eating forages that mom is eating, drinking water, but they still go to momma to nurse. In the dairy operations calves are weaned from milk formula when they are 3 months old. In the beef cattle industry and ranches, calves are officially weaned from their mommas when they are between 6 and 10 months old.
Good question but i dont have a clue
It depends on whether the bull has been with the herd for a long period of time, or if he's been separated for a time and is put in with the cow herd at the start of breeding season, which usually should have began a month earlier than 4 months. Usually, though, the calves are not in danger of getting hurt by the herd bull.
Anywhere from 2 minutes to about an hour.
A cow can have anywhere from one to 20 calves in her lifetime, depending on how productive she is and how long she is able to stay in the herd to produce those calves. On average, a cow will produce eight calves in her lifetime. Cows that are used for embryo transfer can produce up to twice as many calves in her life time than she can by her own doing. The record number of calves a cow has had in her lifetime is 39.
You can feed chickens mushrooms as long as they are not poisonous. They won't hurt the chicken, but it might not do any good either. If you don't know if the mushrooms are poisonous or not, then you would do best avoiding feeding them mushrooms.
As long as the milk is straight from the cow, not the stuff that has been modified by humans (i.e., milk that has undergone pasteurization). Calves are best put with a nurse cow than if they were bottle fed.
i do not no
Calves are the babies of cows, so out in a field they are the four-legged creatures that are found along side the cows, long-legged, cute-looking, but a quarter to half the size of their mothers.