That all depends on the age of the heifer. The older the heifer, the heavier she'll be.
A newborn Longhorn calf averages around 40 to 50 lbs.
yes but it would be like raping your daughter
No, unless the average weight of the main cowherd is 1000 lbs, which then the heifer is 60% of the average cowherd weight. But, if the average mature weight of your herd is a bit higher, then definitely not, as she is obviously too young and too light to be bred. If she's bred already, inject some Lutalyse in her NOW.
Depends on its age and sex. Older calves weigh more than younger calves; male calves weigh more than heifer calves. Average birth weight is around 60 to 80 lbs.
An average cow can weigh between 450 and 700 kg or more.
A newborn Longhorn calf averages around 40 to 50 lbs.
yes but it would be like raping your daughter
No, unless the average weight of the main cowherd is 1000 lbs, which then the heifer is 60% of the average cowherd weight. But, if the average mature weight of your herd is a bit higher, then definitely not, as she is obviously too young and too light to be bred. If she's bred already, inject some Lutalyse in her NOW.
Average daily gain is the amount of weight an animal (steer, heifer, bull or cow) gains per day.
Depends on its age and sex. Older calves weigh more than younger calves; male calves weigh more than heifer calves. Average birth weight is around 60 to 80 lbs.
Calves would be around 350 to 500 lbs. Five-hundred pounds is probably the max weight for a steer or heifer used in steer wrestling or bull-dogging.
Bulls weigh around 1800 lbs. Cows only around 1000 lbs. However, if you're referring to a Texas Longhorn football player, the average weight of these fellas is around 200 lbs.
An average cow can weigh between 450 and 700 kg or more.
6 months...
That all depends on the gender of that calf. Bull or heifer or steer?
That really depends on the breed of the heifer and her age. At the most she should be around 24 months of age when she calves. Brahman and Brahman-influenced heifers should be a few months older. Weight really isn't a factor in this type of question.
You could call it a heifer, or a twin heifer if the sibling is also a heifer, or a freemartin if the heifer's sib is a bull calf.