A typical Jersey would produce around 15 kg (~4 gal.) of milk per day on good feed and pasture.
A typical Jersey cow will produce 5000 kg per year (or 1319 gal per year).
Heifers don't produce milk. Not until after they've had a calf. It doesn't matter how good her genetics are, whether she's registered or not, nor what you're feeding her, the bovine in her is telling you that unless she becomes a first-calf heifer and gives birth to her first calf, she will not produce milk.
Timothy is a grass hay
Melilot (Sweet Clover) has been known to produce Coumadin when it is spoiled.
Grass, alfalfa, clover, and timothy are all used for livestock fodder.
Yes, clover plants can produce oxygen through the process of photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, plants take in carbon dioxide from the air and water from the soil to produce oxygen as a byproduct.
Yes, clover is a nitrogen-fixing plant that can help increase nitrogen levels in the soil through a symbiotic relationship with bacteria in its roots.
The shamrock, a symbol of Ireland and a registered trademark of the Republic of Ireland, is a three-leafed old white clover, sometimes of the variety Trifolium repens(a white clover, known in Irish as seamair bhán) but today usually Trifolium dubium (a lesser clover, Irish: seamair bhuí).
hay - alfalfa, clover, timothy, grass. oats bran barley sweet feed pellets hay cubes carrots apples
Ireland does not have a national flower. The Shamrock is a registered trademark and the unofficial national flower. However, many people do not consider clover to be a flower
bush clover, dutch clover, hop clover, land-rover, moreover, red clover, sea rover, sweet clover, white clover
No, I do not buy four-leaf clover plants as I am a digital assistant and cannot make purchases. However, four-leaf clover plants are considered lucky charms and can sometimes be found in plant nurseries or online stores for purchase.
cow clover