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Dairy farming is a class of agricultural enterprise,
raising female cattle for long-term production of milk, which may be either processed on-site or transported to a dairy for
processing and eventual retail sale. Most dairy farms sell the male calves borne by their cows, rather than raising
non-milk-producing stock. Many dairy farms also grow their own feed, typically including corn, alfalfa, and hay.
Most milk-consuming countries have a local dairy farming industry, and most producing countries maintain significant subsidies and trade barriers to
protect domestic producers from foreign competition. In large countries, dairy farming tends to be geographically clustered in
regions with abundant natural water supplies (milk is mostly water) and relatively inexpensive land (even under the most generous
subsidy regimes, dairy farms have poor return on capital).
In the United States, dairy farming is an important industry in
Vermont, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, but the largest
state in dairy production is California. In Europe, Denmark, northern France (particularly Normandy), and Switzerland are particularly known as centers of dairy production.
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