Misinterpretation. All the universe was created in one act...like the "big bang" suggests. (
Genesis 1:1) That means that all the heavenly bodies were already in existence when God prepared the earth for habitation. The first thing that appeared was "light"...the only light source earth has is its sun, though not clearly visible till day 4, when all the heavenly bodies became visible from an earthly perspective.
We've gone through this before. Your interpretation doesn't match the text. It says that God
created the stars, not that he just revealed what he had created earlier.
That's a new one. Why wouldn't plants and trees come first? What would land animals eat if there was no grass or trees?
They ate ferns, mostly.
Woody plants - the ancestors of modern trees - didn't arise until ~320 million years ago, more than 300 million years after the first animals (edit: and 200 million years before animals down some time on land, and 100 million years before exclusively land-based animals).
I didn't mention grasses, but since you bring it up: grasses were the last major group of plants to evolve: ~40 million years ago, after the dinosaurs were already extinct.
Who says they weren't? It doesn't say birds anyway......it says flying creatures which includes everything with wings. How many species are we talking about here? God is not specific about what "flying creatures" he created first among those.
The passage says "birds and flying creatures," so it does specify birds.
Birds evolved from land animals, so they came after land animals, not before.
Since the very last creature to be formed was human, (even science recognizes that we were the last on the scene) of course there were cattle before people.
Cattle are a human invention. They were created through breeding, starting with the wild (now-exinct) aurochs.
Edit: to be fair, this is one point where translation might matter. I'd be open to the possibility that whatever Hebrew term they translated as "cattle" might have a broader meaning in the original language.
And science doesn't "recognize that we were last on the scene." Evolution keeps happening and new species keep arising.
So there you go: a handful of ways that your day-age creationist approach just doesn't reflect the science. Your views of how life arose and what the evidence says just aren't compatible.