This will depend solely on the individual cow's ability to produce. Some cows will produce 48 kg of milk per day while others may give only 30 kg of milk per day.
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Cows produce 19,825 pounds of milk each year. That's 2,305 gallons of milk a year or about 8 gallons of milk every day of her milking period.
It takes between 85 and 95 to produce 500 gallons of milk. Each cow produces approximately 6 gallons of milk per day.
No. Dairy cows have much larger udders than beef cows do. A dairy cow has been selected to produce more milk than what she can feed her calf to meet the farmers' demands for more milk to be produced per cow per day.
A good cow is likely producing 25-30 litres of milk a day. Some though - will give as much as 50L a day.
Holstein cows produce the most milk per day on a weight basis - a healthy 3-year old Holstein at the peak of lactation can produce up to 170 pounds of milk a day (about 21 gallons).
In North America most dairy cows produce about 8 gallons per day, or about 20,000 pounds per year.
Cows average between 8-9 gallons of milk per day depending on weather. The highest producing cows at the beginning of their lactation can produce 15-17 gallons of milk per day. Other factors weigh heavily on the amount of milk given such as breed and genetics. Milk contains what in dairy farming is referred to as components (fat, protein, lactose and other minerals such as calcium) cows with higher components tend to have lower volumes of milk. Traditionally Jersey cows have higher components and less volume than Holstein cows.
Modern Marvels told me they can produce up to 1000 lbs/day with 56% milk fat.
About a gallon a day .
Answer: None. No milk can produce a cow. But, a cow can produce milk, and depending on the breed! A cow can produce anywhere from 10 to 20 pounds of milk per day (typical beef breeds) to over 40 pounds (typical dairy breeds like the Holstein).
one Ayrshire can produce six gallons at lease.