As a diary farmer that grazes cows I can tell you this is false. If it had any truth to it it could be due to predators. Wild animals usually face the direction where a predator is most likely to emerge from
Nothing. Cows don't have gizzards, birds do. Where chickens have gizzards to break down food, cows have rumens.
Yes cows do canter. The canter seems to me to be an efficient movement, as the cows stomach bounces up and down in rhythm with the canter. Cows also gallop.
Cows only lay down when they are chewing their cud and resting after eating their fill. They don't lay down for any other reason, even when a storm or rain-shower is coming or happens. See the related question below for more.
Because when companies burn down old aluminium, its smoke residue rises into the sky, where it is rained down onto the grass, which cows eat. Over time, with prolonged exposure/digestion of aluminium, it, for whatever reason, causes the teeth of cows to fall out.
Hours at a time, they sleep this way also.
The correct spelling is "lying down."
Yes, cows do snore, but only when they are in a deep sleep while laying down they do not stand up like horses
Upwind = tack, Down wind = gybe
The acceleration is opposite the direction the object is moving, so the acceleration is negative and southward.
Yes, though they like to stand around and ruminate (chew their cud) for a while first before they lay down to take a nap.
Yes.
Laying down.
The milk that goes down the drain is milk that has been collected from cows that have mastitis. Cows with mastitis cannot have their milk mixed with the milk of cows that do not have mastitis.
Leas, meadows.
Cows and bulls can both walk down stairs, as long as the stairs are wide and long enough. Some dairy sheds have stairs for the cows to walk down if the shed is on slanted ground.
The direction of latitude is horizontal, while longitude is up and down. Lines of latitude run parallel to the equator.
no