There are too many variables at stake here to be able to fully answer this question. It all depends in the size of the cow, what she is or has been fed, her maintenance and thus lactation and reproductive requirements, the quality of the feed or pasture she is fed or eating, what condition she is in (needs to stay at, lose or gain), and moisture content of the feed.
We can, however, provide an average amount that a cow should consume in an entire year, not counting for the variables expressed above. Let's say we have a 1000 lb cow that eats 2% of her bodyweight in dry matter feed per day. That means she is eating around 20 pounds of dry matter per day. So for an entire year (365 days) that calculates out to 7300 pounds, which means she is expected to consume around 3.3 tons of feed a year on a dry-matter basis. On an as-fed basis, that number could change from anywhere around 4 tons to 12 tons or more. This is because a cow will consume more feed if it is higher moisture and better quality, and will eat more if she's thin and needs to compensate for losses sustained over time, and/or is experience some level of cold stress that is causing her to eat more to meet her energy or nutrient needs. Lactating cows also tend to eat more than dry cows, and pregnant cows will eat more than open (non-pregnant) cows. Finally, some cows are more "feed efficient" than others and despite being in the same lactational or reproductive stage as the other, one may eat less feed to maintain the same condition (or even increase it) than another cow.
A rule of thumb to know is that a cow will not consume the same amount of feed over an entire year. No cow consumes the same amount of feed as another cow, not even on a dry-matter (all water removed) basis.
I've always heard that the rule of thumb is: One cow per acre or One horse per 3 acres. The difference is that a horse pulls up the grass and a cow cuts the grass. Also - It can depend on where the property is... south Texas is more like 2 acres per cow, farther north can be 2 per acre.
There is no such thing or grass species as "cow grass."
Not at all. Grass is eaten by a cow, not produced by a cow.
It depends on what state and area you live in. Heavy grass and warm winters could support 1 cow per acre. Most areas require
It depends on your soil, rainfall and type of grass. The recommendation for Oklahoma is a maximum of 12 acres per cow with native grass. If you plant grass or buy hay you can run more but you have to factor in the price for fertilizer and hay.
No. Cows EAT grass. They do not "have" grass.
Cow.
The cow eats grass is a correct sentence.
Cow's graze on grass to feed as they can easily digest grass.
This is one question that is impossible to answer because of many reasons such as:A cow cannot live on one type of forage for an entire yearA dairy cow will need to be treated or given a preventative for bloat from a diet of nothing but alfalfa, if that is what the purpose of the question is.Location was never specifiedPrecipitation for the particular area was never identifiedA question of whether that cow is being grazed on alfalfa or if it's being fed all year round needs to be answeredWhat is the weight of this cow? What breed?If the cow is being fed, how many times during a growing year is that to-be-specified acreage of alfalfa should be cut? Once? Twice? Thrice?If the cow is not being fed a diet of strictly alfalfa as was posed in the second bullet, then what else is this cow being fed?As such, depending on your location and, as mentioned before, how many cuts of alfalfa are taken off if the cow is being fed and not grazed, acreage can range from 2 acres to 20 acres. If grazed, it would be significantly more than that.
No, a cow eats grass.
Cow is common noun and grass is proper noun