Don't you know that "mother dairy milk" and cow's milk are the same thing? Everyone associates "dairy" with cows, unless otherwise specified like goats or sheep or camels.
Goat's milk contains no lactose, unlike cow's milk. It's not because it has no fat, because actually goat's milk is higher in fat content than cow's milk.
fun facts about dairy cows
Angus cows are beef cows, not dairy cows. Holsteins are dairy cows, not beef cows, which is where we get the majority of our milk from.
You don't have to have dairy cows if you are not wanting to make money off of producing milk or want to have milk for yourself and your family. The only time you have to have dairy cows is if you are getting into a dairy operation.
With dairy cows.
Dairy cows
Cows give meat and dairy cows give milk.
No, dairy cows are not extinct. They are quite common in certain areas, living in either enclosed barns or out on pastures or fields. Ninety-five percent of dairy cows are Holsteins/Friesians (just like the picture of the two Holstein cows above), and the rest are Jerseys, Brown Swiss, Dutch Belted, Montbeliard, Normande, Canadienne, Fleckvieh, and others. Dairy cows are easily identifiable by either the black and white coat colour, or the large udders with seemingly thin appearance (pronounced by the projecting hip bones usually).
dairy is renewable
45 percent. or 45%
Not referee cows.
No they don't. Milking cows, or dairy cows are a different type of cow than beef cows are. Dairy cows give birth to dairy cows, no matter if they are crossed with a beef breed or not. The dairy-beef crossbred cow as a result still has stronger dairy qualities in her than her dairy mother.
The answer to that would most likely be cellulose or lignin. Cows can break this substance down, but not completely, and as such cannot be entirely digested in their stomachs.