On a farm. He lives near his mother's side wherever his mother is. If orphaned or separated from his mother at a young age (like with most dairy calves), he is raised in a calf barn with other calves where he is fed milk replacer and forage. Smaller farms that adopt orphaned calves will raise them in a corralled area with a a shed, a barn.
For as long as they are alive. For instance, cows that live until they are 25 years of age can have 23 calves in their lifetime. Cows that live until they are only 5 will have only had 1 or 2 calves in their life time, and so on.
Narwhals give birth to live calves.
Bear calves could be referred to those calves that have such thick fluffy hair that they look like little bears with four legs; these are often referred to yak calves, Highland calves, or Galloway calves, all of which are born with thick long hair. The term could be a mis-spelling of "bare calves" which may be those calves that are orphaned and are raised in a bottle or bucket by humans.
Cows are mammals and give birth to live young.
Not thicken, but you will get lovely long muscles on your thighs and calves. THis gives you a toned look, not a fat one if that is what you mean.
Only for a few days.
No, not at all. If you've extended the period past the targeted 3 to 4 months that calves are usually weaned from being bottle fed, then it's not going to harm your calves at all.
Cows, calves and yearlings live in loose herds or groups. Bulls on the other hand, live in bachelor groups or alone.
Good question but i dont have a clue
Yes; female whales give live birth to calves in late fall and winter.
Occasionally they must meet other whales otherwise there would be no calves!
About 100-125 head cows and calves