Depending on age between 1-5 yrs. of age you should never feed more than 10 cups to any one cow. At 1 year feed one cup 2 yrs 2-3cups 3 yrs 3-4cups and 5 and up can be fed more and more gradually until about 9-10 cups but feed slowly because to much grain can kill or make a cow sick.
7 pounds.
If you are feeding up this "cow" for slaughter, then it should get around 20 to 25 lbs per day, along with hay and/or grass.
A cow will typically eat 2.5% of her body weight of ration DM per day. As to what to feed her, hay, silage, grass and a little grain is the main rations to consider feeding a cow. When a cow is on pasture, she usually doesn't need any other supplementation except a bit of mineral.
Only if they eat too much of it, just like if they eat too much grain in one sitting. Bread is a good substitute for grain for getting cattle to increase in weight, but it is of higher energy than grain and needs to be fed at a limited amount so that animals won't die of bloat or acidosis from eating too much bread.
50 tons a day
Grass, hay, grain or silage, depending on the time of year and what kind of farm/ranch they live at and what kind of cows they are.
one or two pounds of grain
Maintenance requirements are 2.5% of a cow's body weight in dry matter ration per day.
The exact same thing that any "normal cow" would eat: grass, hay, silage and grain.
The exact same thing that any "normal cow" would eat: grass, hay, silage and grain.
AnswerThe short answer is it depends on the size of the cow, if it's lactating, pregnant, the quality of the hay, etc.(Last answer said that they fed cows grain. Grain is NOT grass, cows are rudiments, grain lowers the PH levels of their stomach, causes bad tasting milk and lackluster health of the cow, generally used as a cheaper alternative, or to fatten a cow, in large scale production. Not recommended)
None. Cows eat grass, hay, silage and grain, not any sort of animal meat like "beef nut."