A bull will only stop mating if he is injured (like a foot or leg injury or a broken penis), if the cows are not in heat and not demanding his attention, or if he is culled from the herd because he is too aggressive or has a genital defect that cannot be corrected.
Cows can get pregnant through the process of mating with a bull, where the bull inseminates the cow. This can happen naturally through natural mating or artificially through artificial insemination by a qualified professional.
Generally, a bull should be at least 12-15 months old before breeding to a cow, as younger bulls may not have reached full maturity and could struggle with mating. Breeding a 6 month old bull to a cow could result in unsuccessful mating, injury to the animals, or health issues for the offspring. It is advisable to wait until the bull is older and has reached breeding maturity before attempting mating.
If she's in heat, most definitely. Often a bull will go look for the cow that is in heat, no matter if he's the neighbor's bull or not.
On the Internet of course...or in a book that is all about reproduction of livestock.
The base of a bull's penis (inside the bull) is a sigmoid flexture, which is curved in an S shape when retrated inside the bull, held by muscles that keep it that way. When the bull is sexually aroused and extends his penis to copulate a cow, the muscles relax and the sigmoid flexture straightens out allowing the penis to protude to copulate the cow he his mating with.
Growling, rumbling, etc.
No. The bull could see you as a) another challenging bull or b) a predator and come after you.
If both the male and female are healthy there should not be much problem in them mating successfully.
Cows can get pregnant through the process of mating with a bull, where the bull inseminates the cow. This can happen naturally through natural mating or artificially through artificial insemination by a qualified professional.
yes
to stop mating
Yes the well trained Bengal cats and Boxer dogs usually stop on their own when mating.
Generally, a bull should be at least 12-15 months old before breeding to a cow, as younger bulls may not have reached full maturity and could struggle with mating. Breeding a 6 month old bull to a cow could result in unsuccessful mating, injury to the animals, or health issues for the offspring. It is advisable to wait until the bull is older and has reached breeding maturity before attempting mating.
If she's in heat, most definitely. Often a bull will go look for the cow that is in heat, no matter if he's the neighbor's bull or not.
On the Internet of course...or in a book that is all about reproduction of livestock.
The base of a bull's penis (inside the bull) is a sigmoid flexture, which is curved in an S shape when retrated inside the bull, held by muscles that keep it that way. When the bull is sexually aroused and extends his penis to copulate a cow, the muscles relax and the sigmoid flexture straightens out allowing the penis to protude to copulate the cow he his mating with.
Don't pug him in.