A baldy cow is a cross-bred cow that has a white face and a black, red or yellow body. Crosses that make Baldies baldies include the following possible crosses:
Angus x Hereford --> Black Baldy *
Red Angus x Hereford ---> Red Baldy or red brockle face
Angus x Simmental --> "Super baldies" or Black baldy
Red Angus x Simmental --> "Super baldies" or Red baldy
Simmental x Hereford --> Red Baldy
Simmental x Hereford x Angus --> Black baldy or Black brockle face
Simmental x Hereford x Red Angus --> Red Baldy or red Brockle face
Charolais x Hereford x Angus --> Yellow baldy
Charolais x Hereford x Red Angus --> Yellow baldy
Charolais x Hereford --> Yellow or tan baldy
Limousin x Hereford --> black, red or tan baldy
Limousin x Hereford x Angus --> Black baldy
Limousin x Simmental --> Red baldy
Charolais x Simmental --> Yellow baldy
Limousin x Simmental x Angus --> Black baldy
Charolais x Simmental x Angus --> Black or mousy baldy
Charolais x Simmental x Red Angus --> Tan or Red baldy
Limousin x Simmental x Red Angus --> Red baldy
The possibilities of getting a baldy cow or calf are endless, as you can see.
*However the most popular baldy is the Black Baldy, from crossing Hereford with Angus or vice versa.
This is a breed or coat color (depending on who you ask). The cow is a beef-type (stout, squat, heavily muscled) with a black body and legs but a white face or head. It can be another name for the breed Black Hereford (see related link below), or for a crossbred resulting from breeding a Hereford bull to an Angus cow (or an Angus bull to a Hereford cow).
You can either buy one--off a local producer who sells such calves or from your local salebarn--or you can get one yourself by breeding an Angus cow with a Hereford bull (or a Hereford cow with an Angus bull). Even breeding a modern-type Simmental cow with an Angus bull (or vice versa) will get you a black-baldy calf.
A black cow typically contains root beer and vanilla ice cream.
They don't. That has never happened before, and likely never will. When you cross a White Shorthorn cow with a Black Angus bull you will get a grey calf (this is how the Murray Grey breed came about, by the way). The same thing occurs if you put a Black Angus bull on a Charolais cow.
They don't. It's simply not possible. The only way a black cow can "have" a white calf is if the white calf has been adopted by that cow because her calf had died at birth and the white calf had no mother because it's mother either rejected it or died giving birth to it. It's new surrogate mother then happened to be a black cow.
Yes.
Black Baldy
No. A Hereford already has a white face, so no use calling Herefords "baldy herefords." The genes for a white face is dominant to that of a coloured face like black, red, tan, etc. So, if you bred an Angus bull with a Hereford cow you will ultimately and always get a calf that is black with a white face. The only time you will get a small (16%) chance of getting a purely black calf is if you breed an F1 black baldy cow with an F1 black baldy bull. Another 16% will give you an all black calf that is horned (from the genes of the calf's grandsire or granddam, which ever was a Hereford (non-polled)). However, if you breed an Angus bull to an F1 black baldy cow, you will have a 50% chance of getting a pure-black calf.
You can either buy one--off a local producer who sells such calves or from your local salebarn--or you can get one yourself by breeding an Angus cow with a Hereford bull (or a Hereford cow with an Angus bull). Even breeding a modern-type Simmental cow with an Angus bull (or vice versa) will get you a black-baldy calf.
Genetics. The genes in the momma cow combine with the genes from the calf's sire to create a calf with either the same colouration of the cow or not. What breed the calf's sire matters to. For instance, a Hereford sire bred to an Angus cow results in a black-baldy calf. Or, an Angus cow that has a recessive gene for Red colour and is bred to either a Red Angus bull or a Black Angus bull also with a heterozygous gene for the red gene can most likely produce a red calf. And the examples go on.
The baldy (and baddy) is Voldemort.
Leonard Baldy was born in 1927.
Leonard Baldy died in 1960.
Baldy Wittman was born in 1871.
It it is tottally mountain baldy
The cast of For the Love of Baldy - 1914 includes: Joseph Belmont as Baldy
what popular activities are in mt baldy
The term for "baldy" in Samoan is "polapola."