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.
that depends. is your mom blocking the stairs? lol idk u should try that out and find out =]
A breeding herd consists of mother cows no younger than 2 years and bulls are present when necessary to produce calves at the desired time (usually spring when feed is good for milk production) and at a level to have 20 to 30 cows per bull. Calves are sold after weaning to produce income. Bull calves are castrated to become steers to be fattened for slaughter, some heifers are not bred and also are headed to the feedlots. These are stockers and seldom go beyond three years of age. Others are destined to be replacement cows (higher pedigrees are more desirable just as bloodlines are so important in selecting bulls). Mother cows are "retired" when they "skip"...fail to become pregnant...infertile cows are eating valuable feed...this can occur as early as ten years of age...but many cows continue having calves much longer...then the condition of their teeth may result in an inability to maintain body weight wile nursing a calve...they are also sold to slaughter, but not as prime beef! Dairy cattle are for milk production, of course, but their "retirement" age is similar. "Calf" is a generic term for newborn to yearling aged animals whose gender is not readily observable on the "range" just as "foal" is applied to horses until it becomes apparent they are "fillies" or "colts", the terms "heifers"and "bullcalves"are applied until puberty is reached. So the terms "Foals or Colts" and "Calves" are appropiate when a mixed group of young is discussed. After puberty they are stallions or bulls, if male, steers or geldings, if castrated and mares or cows, ready to produce offspring. So "Cows" and "Bulls"can be around two to ten or even twenty years.
There are many living things in this world. You are one of them. I have made a bulleted list below of ten well known living things. •Humans •Dogs •Plants •Cats •Turtles •Frogs •Pigs •Cattle •Fish •Bugs These are only ten of the trillions of living things in the world.
First of all, cows are, in most cases, mature female bovines that have had a calf. Bulls, on the other hand, are intact male bovines. They have those pendulous, foot-ball shaped "balls" called testicles. Bulls are larger, and more muscular looking than cows are. Bulls are not used for milk production, but only for breeding cows so the cows can have a baby calf. Calves are young bovines. Cows are big, blocky creatures that come in a variety of colours, sizes and even shapes. Most images that come to mind of cows are animals that are white with large black spots and big udders (that pendulous organ between their legs) that feed out in the green pasture and come into the barn to be milked. However not all cows come in black-and-white: the can be all brown, all white, all black, all yellow and even all red; some even come in an orangy colour. Still others have a black, red, yellow, brown or orange body with a white face. Even still others have a splotchy colouration that varies between deep red to brown to black. These are what we call the "roan" colouration. And cows can have horns too, not just the bulls. Some grow long and curvy; others are more shorter and twist downward. However both the cows and the bulls can grow no horns; these are called "polled" cattle. Cows are not built for speed. That is why they look so blocky, and their legs are thick and somewhat short. Big-boned cows have what is commonly called among farmers and ranchers "large framed". But for most people all cows look big-boned. They have a large barrel for a belly, as they have a much larger stomach than people do because cows have to digest all those plants they eat. Cows also have a large mid-section because of the baby calves (or you may also call them baby cows) they have to carry for 9 months out of the year. Their tails are built like a fly-swatter; though the switch is not flat and made of plastic (it is made of a tuft hair just like the hair on the cow's body only it is longer), it is shaped like a lion's but with a different function: to swish away those pesky flies. Cows also have hooves, but they are divided into two on each foot; commonly called "cloven hooves" or "two-toed." They are different from horses' hooves which are not divided into two, but is only one "toe." Cows have a large flap of skin hanging down from their necks (starting from between their front legs) and sometimes from under their chin. This is called a "dewlap." A cow's neck is thick, but not as thick as a bull's, which has a large muscular hump. It is often short, not nearly as long as a giraffe's nor as fine and slender as a horse's, although some dairy cows have finer, more "feminine" (or girly) necks than other breeds of cows. A cow's head is shaped almost like a triangular prism, with the narrower, "pointy" part being the nose and the wider area the base of the head, where the head meets the neck. A cow's nose isn't as pointy as a triangular prism, but more squarish, with a wide, flat mouth meant for biting and chewing plants. The nose itself is the only part of the body outside of the cow that is not covered with hair, but with sweat glands and bare skin. Most cows sweat only through their noses; they cannot sweat through the rest of their skin. Some cows though, like those that have very large humps on their shoulders, and big, bat-like ears, can sweat through their skin AND their noses! A cow's nose is nearly as sensitive as a dog's, and can smell different scents from a large distance away that humans cannot pick up. A cow's ears are not straight up from their heads' like a dog's, but stick out from the side, sort of like your ears do. But their ears are not shaped like our's: they look kind of like a dog with pointy ears like the German Shepherd that stick out the sides, but have a more oval-like curve at the tips instead of triangular-shaped like a Shepherd's. A cow's ear is also quite hairy, in order to protect those sensitive hearing instruments from bad weather and from having pointy stems from grasses stick into its ears. A cow's ears can move quite well; they can move individually, pointing one ear back to listen to sounds behind, while one ear stays forward on the object of interest. They are also able to lay their ears back when they are grazing to prevent any stemmy grasses from poking their ears. Cows can hear quite well, many times better than a human, and often know you're coming before you realize it. Cows are large beasts; they can weigh as much as or more than a small car, and can weigh ten times as much as an average-weight man. The largest breed of cow, a beef breed called the Chianina (pronounced CHEE-ah-NEE-nah) has been recorded to weigh over 3300 lbs which is 1.5 tons. Cows can stand (on all four feet, mind you) as tall as 6 feet in height or more; most cows are only as tall as 5 feet or a little more. Cows are not meant to live in a small suburban lot, nor an apartment, as they take much room and space to feed, water, and move around. Cows belong on farms and out on the pastures, where they can be viewed by you from the roadside as much as you wish.
The typical time between births of twin sheep is ten to fifteen minutes. It has not been unheard of however, for the second to come five to six hours later.
Dairy farms can be found all over the world, but the largest farm is in Saudi Arabia. There are 37,000 cows at the farm that are kept cool using a water air conditioner. This increases the water usage on the Saudi farm to three times what is normally used in the US.
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You keep them moo-ving.
Lots of things come from China where they have alot of manufacturing sites were they can make toys, clothes etc.
Purple. The answer is always purple.
10 Cows. Ten. He Decided to Keep 10 cows, so that is how many he has. He must have had 19 to begin with; since he gave 9 away.
Ten pounds per cow
Normal gestation is 284 +/- ten days and cows don't usually come back into heat for 40 to 90 days post calving.
The ten most common food allergies are milk egg, tree nut, fish, shellfish, wheat, soy, peanut, hay fever, and pollen.
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You won't. You only have a 50% chance at guessing right that the calf is going to be female. Five to ten percent of heifer calves may have some sort of reproductive abnormality that deem them unbreedable. Sixty to 80% of the calves that do have normal reproductive tracts will be still considered unproductive or undesirable because they are either poor mothers, poor milkers, poor forage converters, have poor conformation, or have nastier temperaments than what a producer would like to have. And this is just with beef cows. With dairy cows, being poor milkers, having a bad temperament, or are poor breeders, that increases the odds of a heifer calf become a cow to maybe 10 to 20%, if that. As for a calf becoming a beefer versus a dairy animal, it has to come from parents that are beef cattle themselves and don't have the dairy "look" about them (though some strains of beef cattle do, no doubt) to determine that it's a beef calf, and from dairy parents in order for it to be a dairy calf. For example, a beef calf comes from a Charolais bull and a Simmental-Hereford-Shorthorn-Galloway-cross cow. A dairy calf comes from a Holstein bull and a Holstein or Holstein-Jersey cross cow.
come on by letters to cleo