Ayrshire animals are a breed of dairy cattle, known for their red and white markings. They are popular for their high milk production and adaptability to various climates.
The number of people working on a dairy farm can vary greatly depending on the size and scale of the operation. Small dairy farms may be managed by a single family or a handful of employees, while larger commercial dairy farms can employ dozens of workers for tasks such as milking, feeding, and managing the herd.
In 1933, a gallon of whole milk cost around 44 cents on average.
Laughing gulls typically live for about 10-15 years in the wild, although some individuals have been known to live up to 30 years.
As of 2021, Microsoft has around 181,000 employees globally.
If you are being challenged to do this, you can probably do it if 1) you supply your own milk and buy the lactose free kind (switch it into a regular milk jug) and 2) take some lactaid before the attempt.
Generally I would say don't try it. But I know how college people are so if that's your situation, good luck and keep the garbage can nearby.
I drank a gallon and a quarter in less than half an hour without realising it was a feat. It was easy and I didn't feel sick. The only reason I did it was because mum bought a massive box of those milk flavouring straws that I love. I was only 7 then. So I don't see why people think its impossible.
During a Sunday School class, my high school son drank a gallon of milk and part of another gallon while eating exactly 13 and one half donuts. He then sang on the praise team during our worship service with absolutely no ill effects. He is a legend!
1. You gotta have lots of money to get into it from the ground up
2. Dairy farming is subject to debate among many people because of what happens to the calves after they are born, and the cows after they have been used
3. It's a high demanding, high-labour career
4. Cows are often high-maintenance
5. You can't do it all by yourself
6. Dairy cattle are more demanding than beef cattle and much less hardier
7. Dairy calves must be bottle-fed
8. Dairy cows must be milked twice a day, early in the morning and late in the afternoon.
9. Dairy bulls are VERY dangerous and are not recommended to be used in the breeding program
10. Cows must be AI'd to keep producing milk and calves
11. Dairy cows are often thin, which makes successes breeding them smaller than for beef cows
12. Dairy cows are more subject to illness and injury such as foot rot, ketosis and milk fever than beef cows
13. Some breeds of dairy cows, like the Holstein are more high-strung (though docile)
14. They require feed and water 24/7, and lots of it
15. Some people say they stink worse than other breeds
16. Lots of capital and equipment and machinery is needed to care for dairy cattle
17. Manure management is vital because dairy cows poop a LOT
And other things I failed to mention.
A government study about the use of hormones in animals.
yes! Well not all birds, some of them such as pigeons do. But it is sort of gross, its not like a calf sucking the milk out of its mother, the mother bird hacks up the milk into the babys' mouth.
No, they only drink water. The myth of milksnakes drinking from cows or any other myth where they ingest something other than water and their prey is just that... a myth.
well when a bunny drinks milk it turns into a vicious bunny,in tech talk it would be a vicious little rabbit
and so now you know and so now you know,thank you all for reading this this is one true answer
Cows that milk less than 12 liters a day are usually sorted out. There are cows that milk over 30 liters a day.
In a year the U.S. average was 8800 liters per year per cow. Cows will most often milk for 3 or 4 lactations (periods of giving milk) sometimes as many as 10 lactations.
There are cows that have produced over 100 000 liters of milk in their life.
Up $1.26 at $14.08 that's a lot of money
A brown cow gives white milk. All cows give white-colored milk, no matter what their breed or coat color. However, brown-colored breeds such as Jersey, Guernsey, and Brown Swiss, generally give creamier milk with a higher milk-fat content than black-and-white Holsteins, but usually smaller quantities.
If my memory serves me right it was able 39 cents a gallon.
Cows will produce milk for as long as a producer (dairy or beef) needs to have them produce milk, whether it's a time frame of around 6 to 10 months or longer, depending on their type and class of the cows and the producer's management criteria. The time frame, on average, is between or either 6 to 10 months.
Dairy cows tend to be milked longer than beef cows due to the fact that they're selected to produce milk, not raise a calf. Beef cows will produce milk as long as they have a calf on them.
it depends what you named it, say you named it Stefan then of course but if you named it Ben then no it's weak
Yes. After a cow has calved, she will usually lactate for 10 months before being dried up to ready her for the birth of her next calf. During that 10 months, around three months are alloted for that cow to come back to normal cycling and let her uterus shrink back to normal. By the time those three months are up, she is ready to be bred and settle to gestate for nine and a half months before giving birth to her next calf.
Yes, not only for the fat content, but milk contains calcium that the human body cannot absorb properly without other vitamins (namely iron) so you would have a lot of excess calcium in your system that may cause kidney stones.