They can, actually. Sheep and cattle on one pasture can disrupt the parasite cycle, and plants that the cows won't eat will be readily eaten by sheep and even goatst.
The cows are grazing on the grass to get nutrition.
Graze grass.
birds, insects, graze animals...e.g cows sheep chickens o.m.g i am right.
What cows normally do- walk around.
Around 80 days
Go let the cow graze in the grass.
in early September to end of october on a Dewey morning in a field or meadow where sheep or cows graze and there is plenty of poo as it has fertiziled the land
graze as in cows graze in the pasture
None. There are no sheep in a herd of cows.
Sheep, goats, and horses. This provided cows are already familiar with these animals, and the number of horses are not equal to or more than the number of cows (or goats or sheep). Horses are extremely piggish and selfish when it comes to even grazing, and will harass any non-horse animal so that they get more feed for themselves. Having enough room to graze (and enough feed) would be enough to mitigate this problem.
Not if sheep are managed in a sustainable and responsible way on pasture. If sheep were allowed to overgraze a pasture or graze so much off a pasture that there's nothing left for the cattle to eat, most certainly they would ruin land intended or also used for grazing cattle.
No. Goats are actually browsing animals, they prefer to browse trees, shrubs and forbs than to graze like cows or sheep.