Depends on the medicine and what sort of illness your cow is inflicted with. See your veterinarian on a proper diagnosis of your cow and for the proper medicine needed to administer.
No.
Plenty. "Cow have calf" is not a proper sentence, it's referred to as an "incomplete sentence." To form a proper sentence using these words give you something like this:"A cow will have a calf.""A cow is going to have a calf.""The cow will have a calf.""The cow is going to have a calf."And so on and so forth.
This is a really odd question, because, logically, a cow only gives birth once to a calf. In her lifetime she will give birth to over 10 calves.
No. A Hereford cow will only give birth to a Hereford-Limousin cross calf if bred to a Limousin bull. Only a Limousin cow can give birth to a Limousin calf--IF she's bred to a Limousin bull. Just like a Hereford cow can only give birth to a Hereford calf if bred to a Hereford bull. Otherwise, she too (referring to the Limousin cow) can give birth to Hereford-Limousin-cross calf if bred to a Hereford bull.
Bison cows primarily give birth to one calf a year.
A cow is pregnant, or 'in calf', for approximatly 40 weeks (9 months).
A calf is a baby cow and a holstein cow is a cow that has not had a baby yet and can not give milk.
There's a 50% chance that a cow will give birth to a bull calf. Same with heifers. Therefore the ratio is 1:1 that a cow will be mother to a bull (bull calf) or a future cow (heifer calf)
The name of a baby cow is a Calf
A typical cow will be lactating for 6 to 10 months.
The baby is called a calf and mother is a cow. Together they are called a cow-calf pair, or "mom and baby."
A cow will only calve once a year, and only give birth to one calf (twins 1:1000 births) at a time.