Of course she does!! Canada may not have as many cattle that her neighbor does to the south, but she still has farmers and ranchers within her borders that raise cattle.
Yes.
Canada has many natural resources. timber, wheat, oil, cattle, etc.
Depending on how many cattle are being inseminated at one time......from one to ten around $35.00 each.......From ten to under fifty the cost drops considerably to $27.00 each and over a hundred @ $14.50 each
In some Africa societies, owning cattle is a sign of wealth. Cattle can be used as a dowry.
The collective noun for cattle is a herd of cattle. The farmer drove his herd of cattle to the pasture on the hill. Some other collective nouns are a drift, a drove, a kine, a mob, or a team of cattle.
The duration of Cattle Stampede is 3480.0 seconds.
Cattle
Canada.
The Canadienne. Cattle (of unknown breeding) from Normandy and Brittany where imported to Canada in the 16th and 17th centuries to create a breed known as the Canadienne. Thus the Canadienne breed was the first breed of cattle that was "imported" and created in Canada.
According to Statistics Canada 2013 (latest statistics), there are/was around 13.5 million cattle in Canada.
The best provinces to raise cattle in are Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario.
Economically it is one of the most popular agricultural practices that bring revenue to Canada by the importing and exporting of beef. Beef cattle are raised in the top five provinces of Canada: Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, British Columbia and Ontario.
They provide a boost to Brazil's economy with the cattle they raise and sell.It's nothing different from what occurs in the USA, Canada, Australia or other countries that have cattle producers.
Yes there are wild cattle in Africa and in other 3rd world countries in the US and Canada all cattle are accounted for as they are worth too much at market price
they are from frnce and they were imported to Canada in 1969!
If you're referring to Canada, the answer would be likely Alberta.
Speckle Park is a breed of beef cattle that originated from Saskatchewan, Canada.
The first Angus cattle (only bulls) were first imported to the USA in 1873. But the first breeding herd was imported to Canada in 1876.