That all depends on the size, type and class of cattle you have, how you are raising them and the management criteria you have for these cows. A question of whether some of this land includes pasture or if you are simply asking about raising them in a dry-lot must be considered. You can raise more cattle in a drylot, or in a building than you can on pasture.
I've heard that the ratio is one cow per acre.
I would say where I live we have irrigation and really good soil and we could put about 1 cow per acre.
I've always heard that the rule of thumb is: One cow per acre or One horse per 3 acres. The difference is that a horse pulls up the grass and a cow cuts the grass. Also - It can depend on where the property is... south Texas is more like 2 acres per cow, farther north can be 2 per acre.
A beef cow or a beef steer (castrated male bovine).
A cow that has a calf at side and suckles that calf, no matter if it's her own or foster calves.
sheep, cow ex.
You can graze probably around 5 to 10 acres per cow or more around that area because of less vegetation and scrub brush in that state.
There are several breeds that are raised primarily for beef.
Young camels are raised by their mother. They suckle for over an year and stay close to the cow's side.
CATTLE is the plural for cow. CATTLE are still raised and have been since way before America was discovered.
Usually like a big field. it looks like a pasture or well actually it is a pasture and it can be anywhere from 1 acre to 100.
Because they are beef cattle raised so that their muscles can be eaten by humans.