ok.. what is cow corn? I have made corn for decades... Can we assume field corn? For cattle, we let it dry before collecting. Around 12% is awesome. For humans, we do not eat field corn.
Eating the cow will give you plenty of protein and other nutrients found in meat that corn does not provide.
You would get more energy from eating the corn directly. In general, only about 10% of the energy gets passed up the food chain which means that you only get 10% of the energy that was originally contained in the corn by eating the cow that ate the corn.
You would get more energy from eating the corn directly. In general, only about 10% of the energy gets passed up the food chain which means that you only get 10% of the energy that was originally contained in the corn by eating the cow that ate the corn.
Are you serious?? Humans cannot get calories from the sun, they get it from their food! So the answer is they would get more calories from eating corn-fed beef than corn itself.
you got it the other way round, the corn makes the cow
It depends on what you're currently feeding your cow, and whether that cow is indeed a cow (as in a mature female bovine), or the colloquial version of a "cow," where you may be instead referring to a steer, heifer or calf. The dominating reason that your cow (or "cow") is not eating corn is because she/he may be suffering from acidosis from you feeding too much corn too quickly or from introducing it too quickly where she/he overate and is now suffering the consequences. However, it could also be that your cow is not familiar with the taste or texture of the grain and is not eating it because they don't know what it is. You could solve this problem by mixing the corn into the hay ration, or pouring a little molasses over to allow your bovine to try to like it. If none of those work, you can try to find a different grain source or energy source that may be more palatable--or more familiar--to your animal.
It's not that easy to take account how much corn the cow ate, other than going into the corn field, finding the tracks and tracking the cow from the point where she entered the field to the point where she came out--or were forced out.
One "cow corn" plant--more properly called field corn--plant will often have two to three ears on it.
"Cow Corn" or animal feed is simply corn that is harvested later than sweet corn. "Cow Corn" is then dried and used for animal feed, or used in ethanol. Field corn is a far less sweet for of corn and is not the same as sweet corn. It has more carbohydrates and is grown differently. Most corn will grow only one ear per stalk. Newer hybrids of field corn can grow two or three ears per stalk. It has a far drier taste then sweet corn.
To eat the mice that are eating the corn in the corn fields
Oink!
There is no difference.