Beef for the freezer!
That all depends on the weight of the cow in question. For instance, if you are comparing to how many people weigh the same as a 1000 lb cow, then that would be 5 x 200 lb men to be of equivalent weight to a 1000 lb cow.
That really depends on the breed, and whether you're referring to an actual cow or the colloquial version of a "cow," and whether that 1000 lb weight is actually live-weight or carcass weight.
Average manure output from a cow is 12 tons per year per 1000 lb liveweight. That works out to 72.5 lbs per day.
1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)
1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)1000 lb = 0.5 t(US)
A cow, be she beef or dairy, can give 12.0 tons of excrement per year per 1000 lbs. In other words, a 1000 lb cow will accumulate 12 tons of manure per year. A cow that is larger than that, like 2000 lbs, will give more; around twice as much.
A 1300-lb- Sea Cow - 1915 was released on: USA: June 1915
No, 1000 lbs do not make 3 T.
This depends on the size of the bale, whether it's a small square bale or a large round bale. A cow will eat 2.5% to 4% of her body weight per day. For a 1000 lb cow, that's 25 lbs to 40 lbs per day respectively, dry or lactating, respectively (lactating cows tend to eat 50% more than if they were dry). For a 1800 lb cow, that's 45 lbs dry to 72 lbs lactating per day, respectively.One small square bale of hay weighing around 75 lbs will feed one 1800 lb lactating cow per day, not counting wastage percentage. A dry 1800 lb cow will eat that bale up in around 1.8 days. That same small square bale will feed a dry 1000 lb cow around 3 days, and when she's lactating and suckling a calf, around 2 days.A large round bale of hay weighing 2200 lbs (one ton) will feed a lactating 1800 lb cow for 30 days. When she's dry, the bale will last her for less than 50 days. As for the 1000 lb lactating momma, that 2200 lb bale will last her for 55 days. When she's dry, she will be on it for 88 days.So translating that on a bale-per-day basis, here's the results, assuming no waste:1800 lb cow, lactating, fed small 75 lb square bale: 0.96 bales/day1800 lb cow, dry, fed small 75 lb square bale: 0.6 bales/day1000 lb cow, lactating, fed small 75 lb square bale: 0.5 bales/day1000 lb cow, dry, fed small 75 lb square bale: 0.333 bales/day1800 lb cow, lactating, fed large 2200 lb round bale: 0.033 bales/day1800 lb cow, dry, fed large 2200 lb round bale: 0.02 bales/day1000 lb cow, lactating, fed large 2200 lb round bale: 0.018 bales/day1000 lb cow, dry, fed large 2200 lb round bale: 0.011 bales/day
An average 1600 lb cow (which is the average weight of all cattle) is a little over 120 lbs, when including feces and urine.
You cannot make a cow. Feed is to be fed to a cow, not to make one.
No. 1 ton = 2240 lb => 1/4 ton = 560 lb 1000 lb = 1000/2240 ton = 25/56 ton ~= 0.45 ton.