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.
Cows that are milked are referred to as dairy cows. These cows are milked in a barn or a milk house.
With dairy cows, yes. Other times cows (including beef cows) will moo when they are calling to their calves, or when it's feeding time, or even when they're in heat.
They were milked the old fashioned way.Now they use factories to milk cows.
The word that starts with 'da' that is the place where cows are milked is called a dairy. Cows are milked two or three times a day in a milking parlor.
No, Highland cattle are primarily beef cattle. They will not produce the amount of milk a dairy breed would, but can be milked.
Never. No cows were milked in a plane, not ever.
Cows do not feel pain when milked, nor are they milked forcibly. They willingly go to the milker when their udders fill up.
The place where cows are milked is called a milking parlor or a milking shed. This is where farmers can safely and efficiently extract milk from the cows.
Milkmaids.
Not if they don't need to be milked, no. But, if you're hired to milk dairy cows, and Jerseys are among those cows that need to be milked, then the answer would be a very obvious yes.
Beef cows = beef cows, so yes, obviously.
no