Yes it should be, since Limousins are known for their great calving-ease, or ability to give birth without human assistance.
No. A Hereford cow will only give birth to a Hereford-Limousin cross calf if bred to a Limousin bull. Only a Limousin cow can give birth to a Limousin calf--IF she's bred to a Limousin bull. Just like a Hereford cow can only give birth to a Hereford calf if bred to a Hereford bull. Otherwise, she too (referring to the Limousin cow) can give birth to Hereford-Limousin-cross calf if bred to a Hereford bull.
When she is a baby she will be called a heifer calf, at a year old-Yearling heifer, once she has her first calf-First time heifer, then finally after the second offspring is born she is a cow.
Yes, they have a high quality meat.
That's normal, nothing to worry about. Depending on what breed the cow is, she may carry the calf until 290 or 293 days of gestation. Late-maturing breeds such as Charolais, Limousin and Maine Anjou will often carry their calves over the 284- or 285-day mark.
The name of a baby cow is a Calf
The baby is called a calf and mother is a cow. Together they are called a cow-calf pair, or "mom and baby."
Same as any other cow: around 24 hours.
Cow. Calf came after.
A "calf".
A newborn calf, a baby calf or just a calf.
The best thing you can do is to skin the dead calf of that beef cow's, and drape it over the orphan calf's body so that you trick the cow into thinking that that calf is hers. But this will only work if you have that cow's dead calf on hand and not if that cow doesn't have a calf or if you're wanting to put another calf on that cow. Other tricks include smearing cod liver oil or perfume or some other strong-smelling solution that's not poisonous to the cow nor calf over the cow's nose and all over the back and head of the calf, putting a dog in with the cow and the calf, etc.
A young cow, in the sense of it being female, is called a heifer. Heifers remain so until they have had a calf. However in the more general sense, a young "cow" is called a calf.