No. Silage is one of the more popular feeds to feed cattle. It's like candy to them. And it's good for them too, especially for growing animals that need feeds that are high in energy and protein for them to grow on. Cattle LOVE silage, and no it's not bad for them at all.
Absolutely, yes!! Cows LOVE silage, it's like candy to a bunch of +1000 lb 5-year olds!
Yes.
No. Cows are herbivores, meaning that they are strictly plant-eating animals, not omnivores nor carnivores. Cows eat grass, hay and silage and should eat just grass, hay and silage.
Cows are grown up; they are mature female bovines. They eat grass, hay, silage, and other forages, basically.
Cows do not eat (nor drink) milk. They drink water and eat forages like grass, hay, silage and grains.
Same as any bovine: grass, hay, silage, grain, etc.
No. They chew partly digested forage (like grass, hay and silage), not "spit."
Four general types: Hay, grass, grain and silage.
Yes, as long as they're still being fed. Cows on corn, corn silage and hay can still produce milk.
Same things that other cows from other countries and parts of the world eat: grass, hay, silage and grain. See related question below for more.
Dairy cows, even though they are not lactating, still have higher nutritional demands than dry beef cows, so baleage (a form of silage) is a recommended feed to feed to them.
Silage is a type of fermented stored animal fodder that is used to feed cows and sheep. It is used by farmers because the fermenting process gives the fodder a nutritional benefit over hay or grass.