As little as $200 or as much as $650 depending on the breed
1,000,000 for a white rhino bull, 500,000 for a cow or calf
That really ultimately depends on the breed of that bull calf.
Yes. The only thing is that this "bull" is actually called a bull calf: the "calf" part of "bull" is dropped after the calf reaches around yearling age (~9 to 10 months of age). A cow has just as much of a chance of giving birth to a bull calf as a heifer calf. The sex or gender of her calf is determined by the sperm of the bull she was bred to, not the cow herself.
This question is FAR too general to answer. We would need to know your location, the breed/colouration of the calf, the calf's gender (bull, heifer or steer), and, most importantly, the calf's weight. Otherwise, this question is unanswerable.
$900 heifers -$1000 bull calf Minimum 4 calves At Bison Grove (maybe it was buffalo grove)
No. Her "male calf" which would be a bull calf is much too young, when considered a calf, to mate with his dam. Typically producers try to separate or wean bull calves from their dams before they (the bull calves) start puberty. And in most cases bull calves are too young to breed their dams when their dams ARE in heat, or are separated from their mothers before their mothers calve again. However, if a producer wants to introduce inbreeding into their herd, especially if that herd is a purebred herd, then it is likely that a cow will mate with her son, but only when he's at breeding age, which is over 12 months of age.
35.00
Well bullfrogs cost between 10-15 dollars but it matters where the bullfrogs from!
its free
Anywhere from 300.00 and up.
50 dollars
Depends on the breed and each individual bull. Some may only weigh around 1000 lbs, others may weigh over 2000 lbs. Usually the higher weaning weights (or 205-day weight) a bull calf has, the higher the yearling weight he'll have.