Don't wait. This is a good time to put on the calving chains and start pulling. Make sure the cow is secured in a head gate first, though, before you latch on the calving chains on the calf.
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.
is it an hour
The calcaneus (heel bone) forms the back of your foot. A tendon attaches the gastrocnemius and soleus (calf) muscles to the heel bone.
A cow and calf should not be separated unless you are weaning them. Thus, if you are asking about weaning a cow from her calf and vice versa, you should keep them separate for at least 6 to 8 weeks, longer if the calf tries to go back to suckling his momma again when you put them back together.
That depends on the breed and birthweight of the calf. Every calf is different, and have different lengths. On average, though, a calf may be about three to four feet long from the tip of the nose to the tip of the tail.
It should be about up to your shoulder, off your foot [with out a shoe on].
Almost immediately if that's the purpose of the calf--for meat and not breeding.
As long as the cow thinks it is necessary to hide that calf. Usually a cow will hide her calf for a week or two after birth until the calf is strong enough to be up, running and playing with the other calves.
This depends on when you first put the calf on the bottle. But mainly, it'll be a few months that a calf goes from being dependent on the bottle to being fed as a feeder calf.
Right after birth, or as soon as the calf is out of the birth canal.
For only 2 or 3 seconds.
For women calf muscles can become shorter if they wear heels too much. Because the foot is positioned on an incline the heel is higher than the toes. This meaning that the front leg muscle is extended because the foot is on an incline but the calf muscle in the back which is connected to the heel is squeezed together causing it to be shortened over a long period of time.