Since cows are mammals, baby calves get milk from their mother's mammary glands. These are located below the female cow's rib cage, on their abdomen, slightly forward of their hind legs. They are commonly known as udders, and the average cow's udders have four nipples, called teats. These teats are about as long as a person's middle finger.
The calf stands beside the cow and dips his head down and up so that his mouth can "latch on" to the teat. His mouth forms a vacuum on the teat and this vacuum action "forces" the milk down into the teat. The suction action lets the milk flow into the calf's mouth and is swallowed by the calf.
Calf's get there milk from there mothers.
cafeteria
Calves suckle from their mother's udder, which is the organ where milk is generated and obtained by the calf or the milk machine (if the cow's a dairy cow).
Elephant calves suckle milk from their mother for about the first two years, then move on to eating vegetation.
Killer whales suckle their young, for approx 12- 15 months.
First restrain the momma cow in a headgate or squeeze. Then get the calf up to it's momma's udder, and try to squirt some milk on its nose and mouth. Open the calf's mouth and insert the teat and help the calf to suck by squirting milk into the calf's mouth. You may have to keep doing this for a while until the calf gets it and starts suckling on its own. If the calf is too weak to suckle, you will have to milk out the cow and tube-feed the calf.
A calf that is fed milk from a bucket. There are rubber nipples attached to the base of a bucket, and when the bucket is full, the calf can suckle on the nipples, drinking the milk from the bucket. Hence, bucket calf.
A few weeks. Often the calf will die of starvation before then, if you either don't milk the cow out and tube the calf with her milk, try to make the calf suckle as much as you can, or if you don't bottle-feed the calf. So make sure you are caring for the calf if the calf can't suckle from his momma.
The mother will suckle it's calf for approximately 6-8 months, by that time it should be weaned.
Yes, if it has a mother and its mother has udders and the udder has milk and the calf is liking it.
As they are mammals, they suckle them. The main difference is that because they do this under water, the milk is much thicker (kind of like the consistency of porridge). The calf will be under its mother's protection for a number on months
In nature the calf would suckle the cow (drinking its milk) until it could eat grass. In industrial farming the calf will quickly be switched to formula and the milk collected and sold to us humans instead.
Veal calves do not have their tongues used for consumption, so they would get disposed as "animal by-product" for pet food or other non-edible purposes. Otherwise, a calf uses its tongue to suckle milk from its mother, and to taste various grasses and feeds that its mother eats.
A 'baby' orca will suckle milk from its mother.