A young bull might either be kept for breeding purposes if he comes from a line with good to great genetics, sold as a breeding bull to other dairy farms, or castrated and fed until slaughter. Some younger bull calves are slaughtered as veal or baby beef, but most are raised in feedlots or stocker operations for beef.
If you put a bull in with the cows you are going to get a baby calf!!!
You put it in your dairy farm and get baby cows.
It is a young calf usually a dairy bull calf that is slaughtered usually around 2 months of age.
A young cow is called a heifer, and a young bull is called a young bull or a yearling bull if it is between the ages of 10 to 18 months of age.
Yes.
A bullock or young bull. It can also be called a bull calf if it's a pre-weaned calf.
it gives you 80 coins a day
put him in the dairy barn with the cows and you will get calves :)
Veal does not come from any part of a cow. Veal is the meat from dairy bull calves that are not needed in dairy production and are sent either for slaughter or to be fed a special feed prior to slaughter.
A young bull is a bull that is often younger than one year of age, but too old to be still considered a bull calf. Bull calves are no longer known as bull calves after 10 to 12 months of age.
Because they do not want the heffers to have calfs
The bull dies