Yes, if the pasture is managed properly so that the grasses get significant rest after being grazed. The feces and urine from the cattle that have grazed there add fertilizer to the soil that the grasses grow, and the grazing action also encourage vigorous foliage growth in well-managed pastures.
However, the grass is not greener in areas where the cows have just been pulled off of (i.e., the very day the cows are switched to a new pasture), or if the pasture has been severely overgrazed due to poor pasture management.
Cow's graze on grass to feed as they can easily digest grass.
Go let the cow graze in the grass.
There is an expression: the grass looks greener on the other side of the fence. It means a grazing animal such as a cow - or by extension, a dissatisfied human - will imagine that the grass that is out of reach is more attractive than the grass within reach.
Yes, cows eat grass as part of their diet. They are considered herbivores and graze on a variety of grasses and other plants in fields and pastures.
Depends on your area and farming practices. For countries with snow, cattle will be turned out to graze everyday in the summer months and then brought back to the barn in the fall before the snow season. However, most milking dairy cattle will not graze on grass as they remain in the barn.
Usually like a big field. it looks like a pasture or well actually it is a pasture and it can be anywhere from 1 acre to 100.
Well grazing animals are any animals that "Graze" in open fields. Typicality eating grass and other ground leaves.
THE ACTUAL QUESTION IS THIS..............................................................3 cows graze the field in 3 days and 2 cows graze the field in 6 days then how many days does it take 1 cow to graze the complete field?mathematical answer-------------------------------------------letone cow graze th field in n daysinitially length of the grass = g.grazing rate for the cow= r;growing rate of the grass =R;nowg+ no.of days* grazing rate=no. of the cows *no. of days *grazing rate.g+3*R=3*3*r ---------->(1)g+6*R=2*6*r ---------->(2)g+n*R=1*n*r ----------->(3)on solving the equation (1) and (2)r =Ri.e. grazing rate = Growing ratehencewe can say that one cow can not finish the grass from the fieldmanuallyput r =R in equation (4).g+n*r=n*r (Invalid equation )without using mathematic we can also solve it logically-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------as we know that grass is continuously growing, if cow is grazing at one place, grass id growing at other places, hence it can not be finishedSaurabh Tripathi @ vasudhaika Software Solution Pvt.Ltd Hyderabad
They graze.
The cow has been led to greener pastures by the concerned farmer.
No. When you drive by a cow pasture notice all the tufts of grass standing around the pasture. This is where old cow patties lie because they avoid grazing the grass that grows around these patties. But that occurs only if they are set to continuously graze a pasture.
If 40 cows can graze the pasture for 40 days and 30 cows can graze it for 60 days, this means each cow eats 1/40 of the grass per day in the first scenario and 1/60 of the grass per day in the second scenario. To find out how long 20 cows would take to graze the pasture, we calculate that they would consume 1/40 * 20 = 0.5 of the grass per day. Therefore, the pasture would last for 80 days if 20 cows were to graze on it.