Yes.
Yes you can. You won't have any calving troubles with this cross. Productivity of the calf may be questionable, but it's worth a try.
"Belle" or "Maverick" could be good names for a longhorn cow.
Both will work just fine. Neither cross will have the desired heterosis like Hereford on Angus or Hereford on Charolais will.
Yes, but you have a very likely chance that the cow will have trouble giving birth. This is because Charolais are notorious for siring large calves, and since Longhorns are known for birthing small birth-weight calves, you could land yourself in a heap of trouble. You could end up loosing the cow for all it's worth. If you want a Charolais-Longhorn mix in your herd, you're better off breeding a Longhorn bull with a Charolais cow. This is because the cow will have much less trouble giving birth than if you breed vice versa.
The inclusion of the Angus bull is irrelevant to this question since the bull has no control nor part in the length of a cow's gestation period. Expect a Hereford-cross cow to have an average gestation period of around 285 days long, plus or minus a few days.
Yes you can. You won't have any calving troubles with this cross. Productivity of the calf may be questionable, but it's worth a try.
Yes. The Watusi is a breed of cow, which is a ruminant, which chews cud.
The bottom, since they are herbivores.
"Belle" or "Maverick" could be good names for a longhorn cow.
Both will work just fine. Neither cross will have the desired heterosis like Hereford on Angus or Hereford on Charolais will.
Yes, but you have a very likely chance that the cow will have trouble giving birth. This is because Charolais are notorious for siring large calves, and since Longhorns are known for birthing small birth-weight calves, you could land yourself in a heap of trouble. You could end up loosing the cow for all it's worth. If you want a Charolais-Longhorn mix in your herd, you're better off breeding a Longhorn bull with a Charolais cow. This is because the cow will have much less trouble giving birth than if you breed vice versa.
Yes there is such thing as a non milking cow in other words a non milk producing cowthere is aDairy CowBeef CowBullBut a bull is a male so we can cross bull out BULL a dairy cow produces milk so we can cross that out too DAIRY So the non milk producing cow is a Beef CowI Hope this helped!!
...a whole-sting? bum-bull-bee?
The inclusion of the Angus bull is irrelevant to this question since the bull has no control nor part in the length of a cow's gestation period. Expect a Hereford-cross cow to have an average gestation period of around 285 days long, plus or minus a few days.
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.
They do, it's just not a common cross like Hereford to Angus or Simmental to Angus. Don't complain about it, just get a TL over that brimmer cow of yours and see what kind of calf you get and what it will grow up to be.
A longhorn steer a castrated male bovine of the cattle breed Texas Longhorn They have horns, and hair colouration varies wildly between each animal. Check out the pictures below for more. However this steer may be called a longhorn but instead of actually being a Texas Longhorn steer, but a steer of a different breed including Ankole-Watusi, Corriente, English Longhorn, Florida Cracker/Pineywoods, Spanish Criollo, Spanish Fighting Bulls, etc.