Yes. Cows are mammals and have their calves alive. Unless the cow has a miscarriage, then the calf comes out already dead.
Either out on pasture, in a drylot where the mother can get them on some warm straw, or in a calving pen.
They can be born in a pen (recommended place for calving), out on pasture, in the barnyard, or in the barn.
Yes, of course they are! Their legs start developing within the last part of the first trimester of pregnancy.
Calves are born alive
Baby dolphins (called calves) are born alive.
Male and female calves are born alive and nursed with mother's (cow's) milk. That means that they are mammals. They are also warm-blooded.
two calves were born yesterday.
No. Blue eyes in calves is a very rare genetic occurrence. Almost all calves born into this world are born with brown eyes, not blue.
Anytime.
Yes.
goats are born in the spring that's what I think okay
This question is impossible to answer since we have no idea of location where these calves are born, location as in country or state/province.
If it is a group of calves born from different mothers than you call them a herd of calves or a group of calves. If it is two calves born at the same time from the same mother than they are twins, just the same as human offspring would be called.
Studies have shown that calves born in summer are lighter than calves born in winter.
Bear calves could be referred to those calves that have such thick fluffy hair that they look like little bears with four legs; these are often referred to yak calves, Highland calves, or Galloway calves, all of which are born with thick long hair. The term could be a mis-spelling of "bare calves" which may be those calves that are orphaned and are raised in a bottle or bucket by humans.