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).
A young cow can produce 25 gallons of milk a week. A jersey cow, 28 gallons per week. Guess it depends on the size of the cow. And no, cows that stand in the shade do NOT give chocolate milk. :) My parents Holsteins were giving approximately 40-49 gal a week. My Jersey on silage will produce 35gal per week. On grain and hay she will produce 28gal per week. How much a cow produces depends a lot on what they are being fed and how stressed they are. A happy cow will give more milk than an unhappy cow, and the higher the quality of the feed, the more milk they are able to produce.
No. Female humans do not have the capacity to produce that much milk. Humans are not cows.
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.
Jerseys produce around an average of 20,000 to 30,000 litres of milk per year.
I have looked into this a lot and there is no answer anywhere on the internet for your question but it does happen that i live on a farm in jersey and we get around 2467L of milk from approximately 58 cows.
It requires 88 pounds of feed to produce 100 pounds of milk
It takes about 23 gallons of water to produce one gallon of almond milk.
Because their milk is in much higher demand than human milk.
A Belted Galloway cow can produce as much as 20,000 lbs. of milk per year or 9,000 liters of milk per lactation. The milk has very small fat globules which renders it partially homogenized.
300,00000
A goat doesn't produce cheese. It produces milk, in which cheese is made. The process of milking a goat is similar to that of cows, but on a much smaller scale. The cheeses made with goats milk are much easier to achieve than that made from cows milk. A sheep doesn't produce cheese but there are certain breeds of sheep that you can milk and from this milk cheese can be produced.