Cows are not plants, they are animals, which are capable of growing in any and all seasons.
Some do, most don't. It always depends on when they're bred that will coincide to when they will calve. Some cows may calve on a New Moon, some may calve when the moon is at it's first or last quarter, or some may calve in between any of these times.
Yes.
VERY rarely. Cows will only calve once a year.
Kinda. If you are referring to their rear ends, yes. But, cows calve out of their vaginas, not their anuses.
This all depends on your herd size, how long your calving season is, and the fertility of your cows and bulls. Some people will calve their cows 365 days a year, whereas others will have all of their cows calve within a time frame of 45 to 60 days, no matter if you have a herd of 50 cows or 1000. The better fertility you have in your cowherd, the shorter your calving season will be.
Cows enjoy mild weather with lots of green grass.
You should start calving season by March 16.
Yes, though the differences aren't all that significant.
Plenty. "Cow have calf" is not a proper sentence, it's referred to as an "incomplete sentence." To form a proper sentence using these words give you something like this:"A cow will have a calf.""A cow is going to have a calf.""The cow will have a calf.""The cow is going to have a calf."And so on and so forth.
The majority (at least 60 to 70% ) of all cows in North America get bred between summer and fall. The rest of the cows get bred winter or spring, or any other time a bull or a producer wants to catch them to calve.
they have a special cow weather man