Yes. This is called Uterine Prolapse. This is not a heritable condition, unlike vaginal prolapse, so it is safe to keep the cow and rebreed her the next season, as well as her daughters, because uterine prolapses do not tend to repeat themselves every year like vaginal prolapses do. However, it is highly recommended to contact a large-animal veterinarian to quickly, efficiently and safely put the uterus back in the cow, suture her vulva up to prevent it from happening again and provide the necessary medication or recommended time to help and let her heal until she can be bred again.
The saying 'when the cows come home' means for a very long time or indefinitely, as cows typically come back to the barn at the end of the day, signifying a prolonged wait or delay.
Babies develop in the uterus of the mother. Depending on the species, the uterus comes in a variety of shapes--humans have a single uterine body with no uterine horns, but cows, for example, have a uterus that is divided into two horns, where the calf develops. During birth, the baby passes out of the uterus through the cervix and then is born from the vagina. In the related links section there's a link to a good diagram of the reproductive tract of a human.
Many different products come from dairy cows. Ten things that come from dairy cows is yogurt, milk, pudding, cheese, ice cream, ricotta cheese, butter, cottage cheese, and cream cheese.
A cow's vulva is synonymous to a woman's "vagina" or vulva, and is the entry point from the outside where cows conceive to produce offspring, give birth to a calf, and also urinate from. The vulva of a cow is the entry-way to the vagina and the uterus, and is a part of the cows' reproductive system.
It means taking the semen from a bull and putting it in a cow's uterus by hand, without having the bull to service the cow himself. It is all called artificial insemination.
No. Calves come from the womb, or uterus of their mommas. The stomach is where food goes to be digested, not where babies are grown.
No. Cows have a uterus, like humans do, and give birth the same way.
Offspring come from a cow's uterus. After they are born they are either taken care of by the cow, or taken away from the cow and bottle-fed in a separate enclosure.
Ayrshine cows don't exist. There's Ayrshire cows that come from the county of Ayrshire in Scotland, but there's no place where "Ayrshine" cows come from.
cows.
cows...! DUHHHHHHHHHHHH! where else would COWS milk come from? I mean COME ON!
Till the Cows Come Home was created in 1997.
No. Toast is bread that has been exposed to heat to be toasted. Toast and bread have nothing to do with cows, and the making of bread also has nothing to do with cows and does not come from cows at all.
The saying 'when the cows come home' means for a very long time or indefinitely, as cows typically come back to the barn at the end of the day, signifying a prolonged wait or delay.
cows
highland cows do not come from Italy they are from Scotland but the red are from England and the black are scottish
till the cows come home means when you are waiting pacentlly