A cow could be sold to a slaughter house for a few hundred dollars. The meat of a cow is around 6 dollars a pound and only 175 pounds on the average cow can be used.
the average income of a farmer in the 1900's was from, 120-200 a year.
A steer typically weighs around 1300 lbs at slaughter. Cows, on the other hand, can be any weight, depending on their frame size.
It comes from a farmer who had this one chicken who would always lay eggs that were much larger than the rest and that is where this phrase originally came from.
American slaughterhouses (which for horses are currently shut down) used a captive bolt gun which fired an air-powered metal retractable bolt into their brain. Then they are hung upside down and bled out before being processed. This method is similar to what they do to cattle, however, since horses have longer necks and are more easily frightened, they are sometimes "shot" more than once in the neck or wherever the gun sets while they are struggling. (Saw this in a video.) In Mexico, they use a 'putilla', a knife that is used to sever the spinal cord. The horse is paralyzed yet still fully conscious as it is being bled out. I do not care for horse slaughter, but the only kind that I find humane is the old-fashioned butcher shops where the horses were brought in one at a time, and put down instantly with a gun or a bolt gun ( note the horse is not panicking here as it is not being rushed through an "assembly line" with 300 other horses, so death comes quickly). There is much more info if you go to the link below. Warning! Some of the videos are graphic! It is unfortunate that the banning of horse slaughter in the United States has done the opposite of what was expected. The value of horses have plummeted and the number of horses left starving or completely abandoned has risen dramatically. A lack of humane slaughter houses for horses has caused more pain and suffer for these creatures than would have occurred in a slaughter house environment. Not to mention the abuse as horses are smuggled out into Canada or Mexico to be slaughtered in far more terrifying and horrible methods then would be legal here. There is hope on the horizon though as Nebraska is hoping to revive the humane slaughter of horses for feeding the demand for horse meat in Europe.
This is a question much like "Can women drive a motorbike". Surely a woman can kill a rabbit. Women in general has got a more caring nature than men and due to this, most would probably not want to kill a rabbit. This "lack" of motherly caring nature in men does not mean they go around killing for no reason though. Well. Not most of us anyway.
a farmer would probably get a least a 1000 dollars
However much he/she wants. A farmer can get beef from the grocery store just as easily as a person living in the city or town. They can even slaughter their own animals and have as much beef in the freezer as they want, even selling or giving some out to friends and family.
somewhere between 5-20 million dollars depending on size and grade.
i dont know ask a dentist
There is no simple answer to that. Every farmer would be different as their income would be different. It will also depend on the local rates of taxation and other regulations where they live.
The Slaughter Rule grossed $13,134 worldwide.
I Don't Know, I want someone else to answer this!
The Slaughter Rule grossed $13,134 in the domestic market.
NFL player Jamoris Slaughter weighs 195 pounds.
NFL player Nathan Slaughter weighs 185 pounds.
It really depends on the breed, the genetics within that breed that the individual sheep has, the condition/health of the sheep and how much it has been fed, and the target weight the farmer has chosen - a farmer is required to have a STEADY, CONSTANT product, meaning that he doesn't want to sell sheep that all have different weights.Usually, ~56kg for a prime lamb enterprise. As carcass weight is only ~40% of the live animal weight, this would result in a carcass of 24kg.
That depends on the farmer.