TLC and milk.
Calves .
None. Bulls don't "have" babies. But they can make calves by breeding a cow or two. Or more. The average offspring that a bull can sire can range from 10 to 50 calves in a breeding season. Of course this depends on the cows' ability to settle when bred and not abort.
Cows can have one or two calves at a time. Odd time she'll give birth to triplets.
A mom moose is called a cow. Female moose, or cows, typically give birth to one or two calves each spring after a gestation period of about eight months. Cows are known for their protective nature towards their young, as they will fiercely defend their calves from predators.
two calves were born yesterday.
Calves are the back muscles on your bottom section of your leg.They are also baby cowsbaby cows are Calf'sthe "calves" are made up of the gastrocnemius and the sloeus muscles of the lower leg. The gastrocnemius is made up of two heads and is superficial to the soleus. The soleus is actually the main workhorse, however receives no crredit.
#1. Ease of calving. You would want to keep cows who have a history of being able to calve without help as opposed to those who always need help during calving. #2. Size of calves and viability. You would want to keep cows that generally calve larger calves, as well as those who rarely loose calves due to small birth size or general weakness of newborn calves. Over time your herd will become generally more robust.
Usually one calf per cow. Occasionally one cow may have enough milk to feed two calves, but dairy nurse cows can have as many as four calves suckling from her.
baby narwhals are called a calf or two would be called calves.
Cows finish lactation when they are being dried off; i.e., when they're weaned form their calves, or when the dairy farmer has to dry them off to give them rest before calving in two-months' time.
Whenever you need to separate them. Honestly, it's your choice when you want to separate them. But note that in terms of cow-calf herds, you need to separate calves from cows when the calves are around 6 months of age. It may be a good idea to separate bull calves and steer calves and their mommas from the cows that have heifer calves at their side a month or two prior to weaning. Heifers and steers can be together, but you need to separate bull calves from heifers and keep them separate during the weaning process. This minimizes the risk of these young bulls breeding an early-maturing heifer and getting her bred by accident. Cows should be separated from bulls (NOT vice-versa, as it's more dangerous to separate bulls from the cows) after 60 to 80 days have passed since the bull was put in with the cows. Separate cull cows from the main cowherd the day you are going to sell them or, if you want to fatten up these cull cows, a few weeks prior to selling them. Before winter sets in, separate thin cows from the fat or normally-conditioned cows and put them with your bred heifer herd.
A cow is a female bovine that has at least two calves. "Cow" is also a colloquial term encompassing all types of cattle, no matter the breed, sex or age. Cows, being of the former definition, graze grass, give birth to calves (after being bred by a bull nine months earlier), give milk, give manure to be used in fields, pastures and gardens, and when no longer productive, give beef to eat and hide to wear.