Angus bulls are first opportunity breeders - when a cow is in heat and receptive, the bull will mate.
Whenever a cow or heifer is sexually receptive.
No.
Alfafa, grass, timothy
white,black,brown
Angus Macnab has written: 'Fighting bulls' -- subject(s): Bullfights
Angus bulls don't have horns. The Angus breed itself is naturally polled. A bull that is born from a registered Angus cow and registered Angus bull and comes up horned or scurred is not qualified to be a registered purebred animal, no matter what Angus association it is. And no bovine's horns are hollow. You can see that from the horns that are tipped on rodeo bulls or some range cows.
There are a fair number of different types of bulls: - Mature bulls - Bull calves - Yearling bulls - Virgin bulls - Old bulls - Mean bulls - Heifer bulls - Big bulls - Small bulls - Weaned bull-calves - Young bulls - Herd bulls - [Insert breed here] bulls - Fighting bulls - Bad bulls - Good bulls The list goes on.
There is no exact opposite gender for a heifer. A heifer is a young female that has not yet born a calf. Males that have not been castrated are bulls; males that have been castrated are steers.
Yes. All cattle, regardless of breed, are vertebrates.
Will i think is better to have two angus bulls because it will help a lot to you in the digestive system.
A dry cow or a heifer. Other "cows" include bulls, oxen, bullocks and steers.