It doesn't.
Well it certainly isn't not uncommon for cows to do so. But there is risk that the cow may choke on it, and thus it is often best to let predators like coyotes, foxes or your dogs to clean it up instead.
the first letter in cow is c.
The generic name for a young cow is a heifer. If she is a first-calver, then she would be called a first-calf heifer, usually, though some people refer a "first-calf heifer" to a heifer whose dam was a young cow that has calved for the first time.
No. Dolly was the first cloned sheep, not cow.
No, the USDA grades the cow as a whole.
Yes.
Medicine won't help so much as an injectible hormone will, such as oxytocin. This hormone, produced by females in order to let down milk, will aid in encouraging a cow to expel the afterbirth if it is being retained longer than it should. It would be best to talk to your local large animal veterinarian about this beforehand, however.
There will be reddish afterbirth hanging from the vulva, and you may see a really small calf on the ground nearby.
Then the predators like coyotes and foxes will eat it. This happens quite often in the wild, and there's nothing wrong with it.
The better question is how would you make a cow laugh?
Well it certainly isn't not uncommon for cows to do so. But there is risk that the cow may choke on it, and thus it is often best to let predators like coyotes, foxes or your dogs to clean it up instead.
NO!!!! You leave it alone, let the cow clean it out herself. If you go in there and muck around you could increase the chance of her getting a bad uterine infection which could render her infertile or kill her if you don't treat her.
the first cow was brought by the first European
cow.
There is no way to make a cow that gives beer out of it's udder, instead of milk. If beer did come out of a cow's udder, it would probably taste like urine, the other liquid that comes out of a cow.
the first letter in cow is c.
The generic name for a young cow is a heifer. If she is a first-calver, then she would be called a first-calf heifer, usually, though some people refer a "first-calf heifer" to a heifer whose dam was a young cow that has calved for the first time.