No.
Cows are not plants, they are animals, which are capable of growing in any and all seasons.
depends on the dog. some bleed for a few days some others bleed for a couple of weeks.
Cows do not have periods. But they do show a little bloody discharge a few days after going out of heat. See the related questions below for more info.
Maximum is 25 to 50 cows in one breeding season. Younger yearling bulls tend to service 15 to 30 cows/heifers in one season. Some farms can only afford to have a bull per 10 cows if the pastures are too large for one bull to cover 20 or 50 females in one breeding season.
Keeley won.
This all depends on your herd size, how long your calving season is, and the fertility of your cows and bulls. Some people will calve their cows 365 days a year, whereas others will have all of their cows calve within a time frame of 45 to 60 days, no matter if you have a herd of 50 cows or 1000. The better fertility you have in your cowherd, the shorter your calving season will be.
A 20 month-old bull should be able to breed around 10 to 30 cows in a breeding season. The most may be 40, but that could be pushing it.
Breeding season for cows and heifers should be from 45 to 90 days long. Sixty days is considered optimum.
Average of around once every 21 days.
Yes especially if they are injured, or dehorned or castrated. Note it is only the bulls that get castrated, not cows. Thus it is much easier to say that cattle do bleed if wounds that break their skin are inflicted on them.
Bulls do not experience love or attachment in the way humans do. They mate with cows as part of their natural instincts for reproduction. Bulls may show signs of interest or aggression towards cows during mating season, but this behavior is driven by biology rather than emotions like love.
Yes, especially if they are cystic. Another thing that could attribute to cows coming back into heat after being bred is the bull could be shooting blanks.