If you're referring to the span of time during a human female's somewhat monthly reproductive cycle when she is most sexually aroused, the span of the cycle during which her vagina is most easily aroused and most naturally lubricated, then yes, and it is natural, but it is not called "going into heat." The common reference to this process for female humans is referred to as the three day period before ovulation. That is the span of the monthly cycle during which a human female's sex hormones peak causing her to sometimes surprise herself and do things she would never otherwise consider doing when sex hormone levels are much lower. All female mammals, humans included, go through this instinctive reproductive process.
An entire female dog should go into heat (or season) once every six months for between 14 and 21 days. This should start when the Dog is between six months and a year old. The Dog will continue to cycle throughout it's life unless you have it spayed. Spaying eliminates the risk of many life-threatening diseases such as womb infections and certain types of cancer and so this may be a wise decision unless your dog is pedigree.
It gets complicated with the seasons and legnth of days, but as a general rule, about every 21 days from end of heat to the end of the next heat, or beginning of heat to beginning of the next heat.
Not all animals go into heat, otherwise known as estrous. This is only something you'll find in mammals. Other animals might have seasons when they are able to mate and other seasons where they are not able to mate, as part of their life cycles, but the term "heat" is reserved for the mammalilan estrous cycle, which is based on hormonal controls.
You don't. It will come in to season when the time is right.
If a female is in heat, the male will be attracted to her because of her scent.
yes
did you know that a panda only goes into heat one day a year
No, chickens actually have an ovulation almost every day. A rooster is not needed for a hen to lay an egg, only to fertilize.
Not all, because WE are animals and we don't have a certain time to breed.
Some animals do not have a certain day, either.
Some try and are unsuccessful.
They mate by instinct.
The red thing on top of a chicken's head is called a comb. It is the primary way for chickens to expel body heat. All of a human's skin helps us expel body heat but for a chicken it is only the comb and the skin of its face that expel the heat.
Chickens can freeze to death, yes. I have chickens of my own and one winter a hen of mine refused to go into the coop. Therefore she froze to death.
With good feed a heat lamp in winter and other conditions the will grow strong
Yes, chickens wander as far as they are allowed to go. Luckily, most chickens return to the same spot each night to roost.
Chickens are chickens because god made them.
chickens
Heat lamps.
Quite simply...No people would argue lots of factors needed to produce good eggs, but this is not one of them. If you meant good chickens then yes, you need heat. (i mean chickens to hatch from the eggs) Quite simply...No people would argue lots of factors needed to produce good eggs, but this is not one of them. If you meant good chickens then yes, you need heat. (i mean chickens to hatch from the eggs)
CHICKENS GO BAWK BAWK BAWK
Their god is their way of survival, and that means food.
no, you do not have to heat your chickens coop. all you have to do if extend your chickens daylight hours. i usually have my lights timed to come on at 7am and then turn off at 8pm.
Yes, chickens do eat more in the winter - because the digestive process also makes heat for the chickens as well.
No, it is not a number, if you have 0 chickens there are not infinite chickens there are 0 chickens so you're going to go hungry.
chickens, the nearest place to find chickens from lumbridge is to go to the west bridge then go north past the cows and east you'll find the chickens or the grand exchange
The red thing on top of a chicken's head is called a comb. It is the primary way for chickens to expel body heat. All of a human's skin helps us expel body heat but for a chicken it is only the comb and the skin of its face that expel the heat.
Lumbridge, go South across bridge from the Castle, then head east until you come across a small farm to the north, there should be chickens in there.
Chickens themselves produce heat. A single 5lb commercial laying hen produces something like 10 watts of heat so having 10 chickens in the coop is about the same as running a 100w lightbulb.