A cow will deliver their young at any time in the year but people tend to breed them in early spring so that they will give birth in late winter
A cow can deliver one calf at a time.
The period of time that a cow carries her young is called gestation. It typically lasts around 9 months, similar to humans.
Young camels are raised by their mother. They suckle for over an year and stay close to the cow's side.
A young cow, in the sense of it being female, is called a heifer. Heifers remain so until they have had a calf. However in the more general sense, a young "cow" is called a calf.
The generic name for a young cow is a heifer. If she is a first-calver, then she would be called a first-calf heifer, usually, though some people refer a "first-calf heifer" to a heifer whose dam was a young cow that has calved for the first time.
A young "male cow" (which is non-existent, by the way) is called a bullock or a young bull or, if not of weaning age, a bull calf. That is, if the so-called "male cow" is intact. If not, it is called a steer calf if castrated and is still relying on its mother's milk, or simply a steer after weaning or after it reaches around a year of age.
A young/juvenile cow is called a calf
Once a year.
No. A cow only gives birth to one baby per year (on occasion two).
The young female of a cow is called a heifer. A heifer is a female bovine that has not yet given birth to a calf.
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.
Calf