Yes, if stimulated and if she gives birth to a calf every year.
Right after birth, or as soon as the calf is out of the birth canal.
A cow is a mature female bovine that has had a calf. A heifer is a female bovine that has not had a calf. Therefore there are two possibilities: one, the cow you are referring to already had a calf and is still lactating, and she's in with the heifers (that are probably just weaned) to keep them calm. Two, yes she could be, but it's hard to say since you are referring to her as a cow and not a heifer.
A Pied calf may weigh around 100 lbs at birth.
She needs to have given birth to a calf in order to produce milk. In order to continue producing milk, she has to be stimulated to do so by being continuously milked out at the same time day after day.
Yes, wale calves suckle milk from their mothers. They rely on their mother's milk for nutrition and growth in the early stages of life.
Bovines such as cows typically have udders, while steers do not. Steers are male cattle that have been castrated and therefore do not have the necessary anatomy for udders. Udders are specific to female cattle and are used for producing milk.
The cow gave birth to a small male calf. We called the calf Sunday.
The offspring of a cow is referred to as a calf. A heifer calf is a female calf, a bull calf is an intact male calf, and a steer calf is a castrated male calf (castrated after birth).
They gave birth to a calf and the farmer let them and their calves into the so-called calf pasture.
A young female calf from birth until she has had a calf of her own is called a heifer
No. Heifer calves only have four little nipples/teats where the udder will be after they have their first calf. Heifer calves, when the do become mothers themselves, are no longer considered heifer calves, or a calf at all, but rather a cow or a first-calf heifer. Their udder typically begins to form during the last trimester of pregnancy (if a heifer does indeed get settled after reaching puberty), and will become swollen with milk once her first calf arrives, making her ready and able to give milk after giving birth.