No, not really. You need to make sure that individuals do get along with each other and that there is enough grass to maintain all.
yes
They are facing each other
There would be a total of 2006 legs in the pasture. There are 500 cows with four legs each which is 2000. The horse has four legs and the farmer has two legs. This makes a total of 2006 legs.
That really depends on the size of the cattle. Some stocker cattle operations are able to maintain one yearling stocker per acre of pasture.
There are extensive grasslands in New Zealand, and these support a few tens of millions each of sheep and of cattle.
Counting each other.
they don't
Odysseus tied the male sheep into groups of 3. He and the men then wait until dawn. At dawn, the sheep start leaving the cave to feed in the pasture. Odysseus had each of his men hide underneath a middle sheep in a group of 3, so that if Polyphemus felt the sheep with his hands, he would only feel a sheep on both sides
No, sheep are neither carnivores nor scavengers, they do not eat each other.
As they think the sheep in front knows where the tastier grass is growing.
no hard fealings just move them away from each other
No
The Ancient Egyptians domesticated many different types of animals - sheep, cattle, goats, pigs, geese and later horses.