First make sure if the calf is indeed nursing from the wrong cow. Then separate the calf and his mother into a different pen or pasture and let them stay in there for a few weeks. Make sure it's just the pair that's in there and there's no other cows in there with them that the calf may decide to latch onto.
Yes.
A cow will often make it's calf stop nursing by the time it's around 10 months of age. Most producers have the calves stop earlier though, like around 3 to 6 months of age, to prevent the calf from "pulling down" his mother any more than she needs to be before she calves again.
Newborn dairy calves are removed from their mothers shortly after birth and ideally before they nurse from their dams for several reasons: 1. The cow was bred to produce milk, which only happens after she gives birth. The farmer doesn't want the calf to drink the farmer's product. 2. The calf nursing on the cow can cause the cow to develop mastitis, an infection in the udder, which would reduce or potentially eliminate the cow's ability to produce milk until she had another calf. 3. There are several chronic and nasty diseases that are transmitted through milk from the cow to the calf - preventing the calf from nursing on the cow keeps the calf from getting sick.
A nursing cow is a cow that is producing milk for her or a surrogate calf to feed from. Most producers define a nurse cow as a cow, particularly one of dairy heritage like a Jersey or Holstein, that produces milk to feed those calves that have been orphaned.
Yes. For beef cows that are suckling their calves for as long as 6 to 10 months, the breeding period starts 45 to 60 days after the calving season has ended, in which the cow will get rebred, but her calf will still be nursing from her.
A bred cow or a pregnant cow, or, in the dairy industry, just a cow. In sale barns, if she has a calf at side, she is also referred to as a 3-in-1 or a three-fer or suckling bred cow. If she's lactating, like in a beef or dairy herd, then she's called a nursing bred cow, lactating bred cow or bred lactating/milking dairy cow. If she's not nursing or lactating, she's called a dry bred cow non-lactating pregnant cow if you really want to get technical. In the dairy industry, a lactating heifer that has already had her first calf is referred to as a first-calf heifer; once she has a second calf she is generally referred to as a cow. In the beef industry, a heifer that is pregnant with her first calf is called a bred heifer.
Yes. A cow that has given birth a couple weeks will start going through short estrus periods when she's nursing a calf, and will be able to breed within a couple months. A calf will stay on the cow for 6 to 10 months before being weaned.
The name of a baby cow is a Calf
The baby is called a calf and mother is a cow. Together they are called a cow-calf pair, or "mom and baby."
The age of a cow when it will stop growing is about the age of 5 years. The baby cow will stop nursing from the mother around 14 months old but is not considered grown.
Yes. In a cow-calf operation, cows always have to get bred 2 months after they've calved, which means that they are still suckling a calf when they get bred and subsequently get pregnant.
Cow. Calf came after.