The cow is the only one responsible for the care of her calf. Bulls usually are not, though sometimes they may be used as baby-sitters while the cows go off to graze.
Hopefully, if the cow has good milk and you take care of the cow and calf properly. It often will take a calf between 10 minutes and 2 hours for him to eventually stand on his own and start to nurse. So be patient.
Well if the hermaphrodite's had a calf then it's highly likely that the hermaphrodite isn't a hermaphrodite, but a normal cow or first-calf heifer. If she's producing milk and the calf is suckling and doesn't appear to be hungry or struggling to get milk, then what's the worry? Let the now-cow take care of her own calf.
Who told you that a calf doesn't need it's mother? Every calf needs a cow to properly take care of it, no matter if it's their own or a surrogate cow-mom. Ideally you should have a cow already there to adopt that calf. But, if that's not obtainable, you need shelter, milk replacer, feed, water, and a good understanding of how to raise a bum/orphan calf so that it doesn't get sick and die on you.
The name of a baby cow is a Calf
It stays a calf forever
Its another word for calf at side, which is in reference to a cow that is taking care of her own calf for as long as necessary, which is around 6 to 10 months.
The baby is called a calf and mother is a cow. Together they are called a cow-calf pair, or "mom and baby."
Care for it for a month
Cow. Calf came after.
A young/juvenile cow is called a calf
A newborn calf, a baby calf or just a calf.
A "calf".