Belgian Blue breed originates from central and upper Belgium. Its history tracks back in the nineteenth century, from crossing local breeds with a Shorthorn breed from the U.K. Possibly, the Charolais cattle (a heavy breed from France) was cross-bred as well.
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Showing posts with label Cow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cow. Show all posts
Monday, January 5, 2015
Monday, August 25, 2014
Funny Animals | Best Of April - May - Jun 2014 | gifs with sound compilation GWS4ALL
i thought only in cartoons you can see man and lion playing ball game. Watch this video to see more
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Youtube | GIFS WITH SOUND 2Thursday, March 13, 2014
Cows' Farts Caused a Dairy Farm Explosion in Germany
January 28, Berlin Germany (Reuters) - A build-up of methane gas from flatulence of 90 cows caused an explosion to a dairy farm shed in the town of Rasdorf.
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| Photo by calimero74 |
A static electric charge has triggered the accumulated gases in the structure that caused it to explode.
Luckily, no cow fatalities has been reported but, one cow was treated for burns, as told by a police spokesman.
Story here.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Dairy Cows
Dairy cows, also popularly referred to as dairy cattle, are the most popular types of cows kept by countless farms all over the world, kept for their “utility” aspect defined in their capacity to produce milk.
Though not always featured to play vital roles in children-themed stories, dairy cows were the central characters in the 2004 Disney animated feature Home on the Range, putting the traditionally side-line character of dairy cows aside, contributing to the increasing popularity of dairy cows as mainstay characters in various family features, stories and movies.
Dairy Cows are essentially no different from any other type of cow, only distinct in the sense that they are capable of producing large quantities of milk. Also known as milk cows, advances in cattle breeding science has helped breed milk cows which are more capable of producing more quantities of milk. Generally, they are also easier to handle in certain enclosures and homestead conditions.
In reinforcing their capacity to produce milk, dairy cows need to be bred in order for them to give birth to calves, which would lead their biological status into producing more milk. If left to live out their natural life-cycles, dairy cows could live as long as 20 years.
In most cases, dairy cows whose owners can no longer maintain or keep them due to their inability to produce milk are sold as “meat” or “beef” cows, something which male cows are mostly subjected to more regularly than female cows.
Though there are cows known as “dairy bulls” – whose role is to be bred with dairy cows on a regular frequencies – a number of male calves are typically sold for their meat and food commodity value.
Far from being kept as pets, dairy cows are mostly kept for their milk producing capacities, with an economic and market value that is quite high in the farming and agriculture industries.
Dairy Cows Video
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Cow and Milk Facts
Cows stand to be among the more “basic” of farm animals, one which is hailed to be an essential in ideally painting the picture of a perfect farm scene.
The 2004 Home on the Range animated feature brought the traditional cow persona in a different light, telling the tale of how three young and unruly cows managed to help save their farm, as opposed to the passive personalities cows are often characterized to be, with different cows exhibiting individual aggression and tame personas on their own.
Dubbed as the “foster mothers of the human race”, cows stand to be the major source of milk which people drink, thus the reason why they are often found in farms. In fact, every family in the United States during the 1850s had their own cow, with the first cow in America landing in the Jamestown Colony some years back, in 1611.
Generally, cows are milked within an average of 3 to 4 years, with most cow calves being fed milk while they are 8 to 9 weeks old. As with most mammals, a cow must produce a calf for it to be able to produce milk, and most female cows, called heifers, are milked when they have their first calf at two years old.
1856 witnessed a revolution in the way milk is processed, with the development of the condensed milk process by Gail Borden. By 1895, the first pasteurizing system/machine was developed, furthering the processing rudiments involving milk.
Today, an estimated 110,000 farms based in the United States milk an average of 9.3 million cows, with most of these farms being family operated/maintained. Prior to the development of milking machines, estimates note that farmers back then are able to milk 6 cows each hour. With today’s modern milking machines, an average of 100 cows could be milked within an hour’s passing.
Given the benefits of milk, cows have maintained an important role in human societies, now with modern conveniences and benefits which makes the milking process faster and more efficient.
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