No. This is too early to wean a calf. If it's on the bottle, it should be weaned at around 3 to 4 months of age.
65 lbs
The problem is there is none. You have to go by the calf itself and the body condition of the cow (as well as markets and your management practices) to see whether it is good enough to be weaned off milk or off its dam A dairy calf is weaned off the bottle at around 3 to 4 months of age (some may want to go a little longer), and a beef calf can be weaned from its mother anywhere from 6 to 10 months of age. Beef calves may need to be weaned at 3 to 4 months (called "early weaning" if drought conditions do not allow a cow to provide enough forage to make milk for her calf. So it's all up to you and what you consider what age is "perfect" to wean a calf.
A stray calf is commonly referred to as a "lost calf" or a "wandered calf."
A baby calf is typically referred to as a "calf."
No. This is too early to wean a calf. If it's on the bottle, it should be weaned at around 3 to 4 months of age.
65 lbs
You will want to wean at about 5 months of age, be sure to gradually wean the calf, start mixing more water than starter until they are drinking just water, you can do this for about a week or even two. Be sure that the calf is eating forage and start feeding it a calf starter grain (if you haven't already) it is going to need more proteins than calves raised by their mothers.
The average weaning time would be 8-10 months. The mother will naturally wean the calf around 12 months.
The problem is there is none. You have to go by the calf itself and the body condition of the cow (as well as markets and your management practices) to see whether it is good enough to be weaned off milk or off its dam A dairy calf is weaned off the bottle at around 3 to 4 months of age (some may want to go a little longer), and a beef calf can be weaned from its mother anywhere from 6 to 10 months of age. Beef calves may need to be weaned at 3 to 4 months (called "early weaning" if drought conditions do not allow a cow to provide enough forage to make milk for her calf. So it's all up to you and what you consider what age is "perfect" to wean a calf.
Not really. There are a lot of hobby farmers who only milk their cow[s] once a day instead of twice a day.
You have to wean a CALF, not a cow. Cows are mature female bovines that have already been long sinced weaned from their mothers. But to answer the question, yes especially if you want to keep getting calves from your cows.
WEAN-FM was created in 1992.
Don't waste your time. This is supposed to happen, as what will happen after you wean the calf from the cow and the cow dries up after a few days of not being milk. If you have already rebred the cow a few months prior to weaning, then you'll have to wait until after she's calved to begin milking her again.
Often the cow will eventually kick her older calf off if she feels her calving date is near and the newborn calf is need the milk more than the older calf. However, some cows aren't so smart and will allow her older calf to nurse along with her newborn one, which could lead to her losing condition and the younger calf ending up with a lighter weaning weight, if the calf's birth weight hasn't been lighter than usual from the start. The cow's lactational needs depend on the forage quality present. If a cow is only on grass and hay, and tends to not keep her condition as well as the others, her calf will have to be weaned off her early to keep her condition up and have a good-sized calf hit the ground. There's nothing worse than having an overly thin cow having to look after a very hungry calf.
she probaly wants to kiss you
Get it in a warm dry place after it has been born and after you have ensured the calf is alive. Then bottle feed it with colostrum for the first 24 to 36 hours, then slowly wean it of colostrum to replace it with milk replacer. Do this only if the newborn calf is an orphan and you cannot find a serrogate mother to accept it.