I am not going to give you an answer because you MUST, first and foremost, find out why she cannot stand before you force her to do something she either does not want to or cannot do. To do this, you must contact your local large animal veterinarian: this is imperative!! She may be down for a wide variety of reasons, not just hard birthing: Milk Fever, Ketosis, mineral deficiency, broken leg, broken pelvis, broken spine, starvation, dehydration, infection, the lost goes on. PLEASE CONTACT YOUR VET to get a proper diagnosis in order to find out whether your cow can be helped to stand again, or whether it's too late and you have no choice but to put her down.
Foaming at the mouth in a cow could be caused by bloat. If your cow has this and is bleeding from the hose and cannot stand up, it needs veterinary care right away.
Countries Of the World
No it stands for personal computer.
Stand beside the cow. Your right eye is on your right, so the cow's right eye would be on its right. The same thing for your and the cow's left eye.
In spanish it mean head of cow.
The femur in a cow has the exact same purpose as it does for us humans: it provides support for a bovine to use to be able to move and stand on.
Hopefully, if the cow has good milk and you take care of the cow and calf properly. It often will take a calf between 10 minutes and 2 hours for him to eventually stand on his own and start to nurse. So be patient.
Cows stand up when they are sleeping, Usually, people go in the nighttime to do it. It is possible and sometimes it usually gets injured or killed.
Cows have a skeletal system much like people. The purpose of the skeletal system is to support the skin, muscles and organs of the cow.
The hock is the joint on the hind leg of an animal that is equivalent to our heel when we stand on our tippy toes.
They stand around in mud chewing their cud and get milked.
Cow walk slower than humans. Walking with or parallel to a group of animals will slow them down or turn them and cow will speed up when you walk towards them. The cow's shoulder is her point of balance, stand in front of it to move her back and behind it to move her forward.