A cow that is close to calving, and is far along in her gestation period.
The cow was bred on December 26, 2008, since the average gestation period for all cows is 285 days long.
The average should be around 45 to 60 days at the least.
Cows are mature female bovines that have already had a calf, so she can be bred at, well, any age, so long as she's already showing signs of estrus that can allow you a short time period to get her bred.
From when?? From when she was last bred, when she had her last calf, when she showed heat after having her calf, or when she was bred after having her last calf?? Please be more specific so the question can actually be answered.
Any cow is suitable for breeding, so long as she is not cystic nor too young to be bred nor injured or has an infection that could inhibit the proper development of a calf.
A heavily pregnant cow, or a long-bred cow. Or, a cow that is expecting soon.
A cow that has NEVER had a calf in her lifetime is called a Heifer. A cow that has not had a calf YET is a heavily pregnant or heavy-bred, or a short-bred or long-bred cow. A cow that has not had a calf during a calving season is called a barren cow, an open cow, a cystic cow, a cull cow, a meat/slaughter cow, a poor cow, a free-loader, etc.
The cow was bred on December 26, 2008, since the average gestation period for all cows is 285 days long.
A bred cow or a pregnant cow, or, in the dairy industry, just a cow. In sale barns, if she has a calf at side, she is also referred to as a 3-in-1 or a three-fer or suckling bred cow. If she's lactating, like in a beef or dairy herd, then she's called a nursing bred cow, lactating bred cow or bred lactating/milking dairy cow. If she's not nursing or lactating, she's called a dry bred cow non-lactating pregnant cow if you really want to get technical. In the dairy industry, a lactating heifer that has already had her first calf is referred to as a first-calf heifer; once she has a second calf she is generally referred to as a cow. In the beef industry, a heifer that is pregnant with her first calf is called a bred heifer.
Bred cow.
AI is a method for a dairy cow to get pregnant. She should catch (or get bred) within a day or two after being AI'd.
The average should be around 45 to 60 days at the least.
Yes.
Cows are mature female bovines that have already had a calf, so she can be bred at, well, any age, so long as she's already showing signs of estrus that can allow you a short time period to get her bred.
Holsteins were bred to produce more milk than other cows just like Saint Bernards were bred to be large.
A cow is a mature female bovine that has had a calf, so obviously she is already at the ripe age to be able to be bred, so long as she isn't pregnant already.
Yes.