The Bull is a popular name for the sign Taurus.
The bull is a rich dream symbol. Perhaps the dreamer is being too bullheaded about some issue and needs to seek compromise. The bull can also symbolize a large, powerful, and somewhat clumsy person (“a bull in a china shop”), as well as a person optimistic (bullish) about the future course of events, as in business.
the male of cattle; the sire. Bulls are taller than cows and have more massive torsos. The forepart of the torso is better developed than the rear, and the head is more coarse, the neck thicker, the chest wider and deeper, and the shoulders more rounded than are the corresponding parts of cows.
The liveweight of bulls of dairy breeds is 750-850 kg and of meat breeds, 700-800 kg. Sexual maturity is reached at six to eight months of age. Bulls of fast-maturing breeds are allowed to mate (depending on the conditions of growth) at 14 to 16 months, and those of slow-maturing breeds, at 16 to 18 months. The best bulls are selected for breeding. The factors taken into account are breed, lineage, conformation, constitution, state of health, expression of sex, sexual activity, and quality of the offspring. Bulls can be used for breeding for six to eight years, though some preserve their potency for 12 to 14 years. In free mating one bull can service 50 to 70 cows; in directed mating, 150 to 200 cows; and with artificial insemination, the sperm of one bull can inseminate 1, 000 to 3, 000 cows. With the sperm of the best bulls, at least 5, 000 cows can be serviced. Bulls which give poor-quality sperm are not allowed to mate. The role of the sire in completing a herd is great; therefore, sire bulls are given the best feeding and living conditions. A bull’s ration must completely fulfill his requirements for protein, minerals, and vitamins. Bulls are given daily per 100 kg: 1-1.5 kg of hay, 1-1.5 kg of root crops, and 0.8 to 1 kg of silage. In addition, 2-5 kg of a mixture of concentrates per head are given daily. During heightened work periods, food of animal origin and vitamins are added. In summer bulls are kept in pastures (in camps), and in the winter they are kept in cow barns in special stalls. They must be allowed out (two to three hours a day) or used for light work. Those animals unfit for breed work are castrated, fattened for meat, or used as draft animals.
B. V. FANDEEV