Horses do not like to be alone. And usually that horse is a horse that will protect the cow herd as well.
That depends on how long the horse has been with the herd of cattle, and how accustomed (or not) it is to the cow herd. If the horse has been with the herd all its life, no. If it's only been with the cows for a short time, yes.
One-Horse Farmers - 1934 was released on: USA: 1 August 1934
One-Horse Farmers - 1934 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
I think so, if they are altogether in one single barn.
Cheever says that Parris has been arguing with the local farmers who are upset that the cows belonging to people in jail are wandering the area since there is no one to care for them.
8 cows (They all have 2 legs)
7 cows
Cows don't have four udders. They only have one. They do use all four quarters in that udder of theirs though.
Today's Otago Daily Times cartoon has a pair of farmers alongside a stream - and saying "Its perfectly clear it is not the cows polluting the stream - its all those dead fish". Not the answer you expected, but is indicative of one source of pollution.
The cows know it all im not one of them:(
At least ONE bull along with other cows and maybe some heifers. The herd of a cow can also be all cows or all heifers. A herd of cattle can comprise both those as well as all bulls or all steers. A cow herd does not have to have a bunch of cows with at least one bull in it.
BST, through the Elanco Animal Health label Posilac, is given to dairy cows subcutaneously, one injection every fourteen days during the cow's period of lactation. See the related link below.