Simply ... it ain't gonna happen. Women are not animals ... breast milk is solely for nourishment of a baby after birth. If you think you are going to produce enough milk to put out on the dining table every day of the week, think again ... it ain't gonna happen.
A woman will, in usual circumstances, continue to produce milk for as long as she is feeding her child. Your body will produce enough milk to meet the demand of your baby. If you continue feeding exclusively for 6 months, your body will produce enough milk for this, if you cut to two feeds a day following this your milk production will reduce. It is unlikely it will stop after successfully breastfeeding. There are instances when women cannot produce breastmilk, but this is not the usual.
Neither. Female goats produce milk after the kids are born, and for up to two years thereafter, depending on breed, lineage, and how they are managed. After they dry up, they can then be bred again, and will produce milk again after their next kidding.
Cows will produce milk for as long as a producer (dairy or beef) needs to have them produce milk, whether it's a time frame of around 6 to 10 months or longer, depending on their type and class of the cows and the producer's management criteria. The time frame, on average, is between or either 6 to 10 months.Dairy cows tend to be milked longer than beef cows due to the fact that they're selected to produce milk, not raise a calf. Beef cows will produce milk as long as they have a calf on them.
It takes between 85 and 95 to produce 500 gallons of milk. Each cow produces approximately 6 gallons of milk per day.
Olive trees can produce olives for approximately 100 years, but they can live longer than that.
Dairy cattle usually can reproduce milk for about 6-7 years (depending on genetics and longevity), where beef cattle can produce calves for up to 9-10 years (again depending on genetics and longevity).
1 cow can produce the milk that it once took 10 cows to produce. Around 9.2 million cows are being milked on 110,000 farms in the U.S. More than 99% of all dairy farms are family owned and operated. Cows are milked for an average of 3-4 years.
gallactorhea
because your dad left for another women
One cup (approx 250 ml.) has 9.7 gms of protein in it..
The level of hormones that produce lactation is high.
not much is good after ten years but check the expiration date.