no not at all
Typically a lactating cow will eat 50% more than a dry cow would. As for energy needs, a lactating cow needs around 15% more energy than dry cows do.
No. You'll find it'll be vice versa more than anything.
I heard they eat pretty much the same amount. But if you have a horse like my Silky, your horse would probably eat more than a cow. And then again my neighbors' horses hardly eat the grass in their pasture, they like to bask in the sun and play more than eat grass. In my option it depends on your horse or cow.
Eating a salad allows you to consume food lower on the food chain. If you eat steak, the cow had to eat plant matter and drink water to grow so more resources have been used to create the cow than went into creating the salad.
Humans, and any other carnivore (or omnivore) that is higher up on the food chain than a cow is will eat a cow, either by killing and eating it, or scavenging a cow's carcass.
Mushrooms are no more dangerous to reheat than they are to eat the first time they are cooked.
It means that you eat more than you should because cows graze throughout the day.
Eating a salad allows you to consume food lower on the food chain. If you eat steak, the cow had to eat plant matter and drink water to grow so more resources have been used to create the cow than went into creating the salad.
That is infact the safest way to eat an apple. More than one bite can be dangerous.
Far more than any corporate fast food chain will ever let you know.
Well, more often than not, fewer females than males are eaten. But if a female cow was butchered, no, you couldn't eat the actual ribs- but you could have the meat around them.
They won't eat their own feces, but they'll certainly be more than happy to pick through cow or horse feces for bugs or anything they find nutritious to eat.