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Old 08-06-2007, 09:26 AM
SKMagnificent
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,245
Default How do i know when i am ovulating?

We have tried for a few months now with no luck. We want a boy and i have seen a few tips like trying on the day of ovulation.
How the heck do i know when that is. Although i have heard of someone saying that there is some mucus you will notice on the day of ovulation.
How else can i tell and how can we try for a boy?

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Last edited by kimbaby; 08-08-2007 at 11:14 AM.
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Old 08-07-2007, 12:15 PM
SKXtreme
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,635
Default Re: How do i know when i am ovulating?

For ovalution help: here's a good link


As for getting a boy:
link


It's also in the book how to choose the sex of your baby..It does work providing there is not a medical reason for you to have only one sex of baby. IE, if DH only shoots X sperms, it won't matter what you do.
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Old 08-22-2007, 08:04 PM
SKNewbie
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 1
Icon10 Re: How do i know when i am ovulating?

If you are trying to conceive a boy some theories believe that having intercourse as close to when you are ovulating or while you are ovulating is one way to sway your odds in conceiving a boy. Below are some other tips I copied for you from www.whattoexpect.com. Also, if you have white creamyish like cervicial mucous this would be a very good indicator that you are close to or are ovulating. You can do Ovulation Predictor Kits (OPK) to help pinpoint within 12 hours if you are ovulationg. Good Luck to you!!! Astrid
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Fertility
Five Ways to Tell You're Ovulating
Trying to figure out when you're fertile? Here's how to pin down the days.
During each monthly cycle, healthy couples in their 20s or early 30s who aren't using birth control have a 20 percent chance of creating a baby. And that's a surprisingly high percentage considering that you can conceive only around the time of ovulation — a small window of opportunity each month (usually about 12 to 24 hours) during which the egg is viable, or open for the business of fertilization. Doesn't sound like much of an opening? Consider, then, that sperm are able to live to fertilize for a lot longer than an egg is willing to hang out, anywhere from three to six days. Which means that even if you have sex a few days before ovulation, there may be plenty of sperm still around to greet the egg when it emerges. (And remember: It only takes one sperm to make a baby.) Of course, having sex the day you ovulate would be ideal. After ovulation, that window tends to slam shut till the next cycle. Clearly, knowing when the Big O occurs is key when doing the Baby Dance. Here are five ways to help you pin down the big day.
1. Check the calendar: Ovulation most often occurs halfway through your menstrual cycle — the average cycle lasts 28 days, counting from the first day of one period (day one) to the first day of the next period. But as with everything pregnancy-related, there's a wide range of normal here (anywhere from 23 to 35 days), and your own cycle may vary slightly from month to month. By keeping a menstrual calendar for a few months, you can get an idea of what's normal for you. (When you become pregnant, this calendar will come in handy to get a better estimate of your baby's due date!) If your periods are irregular, you'll need to be even more alert for other signs of ovulation, so read on.

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2. Listen to your body: If you're like 20 percent of women, your body will send you a memo when it's ovulating, in the form of a twinge of pain or a series of cramps in your lower abdominal area (usually localized to one side — the side you're ovulating from). Called mittelschmerz — German for "middle pain" — this monthly reminder of fertility is thought to be the result of the maturation or release of an egg from an ovary. Pay close attention, and you may be more likely to get the message.

3. Chart your temperature: That is, your basal body temperature, or BBT. Taken with a special thermometer (yes, you guessed it, a basal body thermometer), your BBT is the baseline reading you get first thing in the morning, after at least three to five hours of sleep and before you get out of bed, talk, or even sit up. Your BBT changes throughout your cycle as fluctuations in hormone levels occur. During the first half of your cycle, estrogen dominates. During the second half of your cycle (once ovulation has occurred), there is a surge in progesterone. Progesterone increases your body temperature as it gets your uterus ready for a fertilized, implantable egg. Which means that in the first half of the month, your temperature will be lower than it is in the second half of the month, after ovulation. Confused? Here's the bottom line: Your BBT will reach its lowest point at ovulation and then rise immediately and dramatically (about a half a degree) as soon as ovulation occurs. Keep in mind that charting your BBT for one month will not enable you to predict the day you ovulate but rather give you evidence of ovulation after it has occurred. Charting your BBT over a few months, however, will help you to see a pattern to your cycles, enabling you to predict when ovulation will occur in future months — and when to hop into bed accordingly.

4. Get to know your cervix: Ovulation isn't an entirely hidden process. As your body senses the hormone shifts that indicate an egg is about to be released from the ovary, it begins to ready itself for the incoming hordes of sperm and give the egg its best chance of getting fertilized. One detectable sign of oncoming ovulation is the position of the cervix itself. During the beginning of a cycle, your cervix — that neck-like passage between your vagina and uterus that has to stretch during birth to accommodate your baby's head — is low, hard, and closed. But as ovulation approaches, it pulls back up, softens a bit, and opens just a little, to let the sperm through on their way to their target. Some women can easily feel these changes, while others have a tougher time. Check your cervix daily, using one or two fingers, and keep a chart of your observations. The other cervical sign you can watch for is the appearance, increase in quantity, and change in consistency of cervical mucus (the stuff that gets your underwear all sticky). Its more noble purpose is to carry the sperm to the ovum deep inside you.

After your period ends, you'll have a dry spell, literally; you shouldn't expect much, if any, cervical mucus. As the cycle proceeds, you'll notice an increase in the amount of mucus with an often white or cloudy appearance — and if you try to stretch it between your fingers, it'll break apart. As you get closer to ovulation, this mucus becomes even more copious, but now it's thinner, clearer, and has a slippery consistency similar to an egg white. If you try to stretch it between your fingers, you'll be able to pull it into a string a few inches long before it breaks. (How's that for fun in the bathroom?) This is yet another sign of impending ovulation — as well as a sign that it's time to get out of the bathroom and get busy in the bedroom. Once ovulation occurs, you may either become dry again or develop a thicker discharge. Put together with cervical position and BBT on a single chart, cervical mucus can be an extremely useful (if slightly messy) tool in pinpointing the day on which you are most likely to ovulate — and it does so in plenty of time for you to do something about it.

5. Buy an ovulation predictor kit: Don't want to mess around with mucus? You don't have to these days. Ovulation predictor kits (OPKs) are able to pinpoint your date of ovulation 12 to 24 hours in advance by looking at levels of luteinizing hormone, or LH, which is the last of the hormones to hit its peak before ovulation actually occurs. All you have to do is pee on a stick and wait for the indicator to tell you whether you're about to ovulate.

Another option is a saliva test, which takes a peek at levels of estrogen in your saliva as ovulation nears. When you're ovulating, a look at your saliva under the test's eyepiece will reveal a microscopic pattern that resembles the leaves of a fern plant or frost on a windowpane. Not all women get a good "fern," but this test, which is reusable, can be cheaper than those sticks you have to pee on. There are also devices that detect the numerous salts (chloride, sodium, potassium) in a woman's sweat, which change during different times of the month. Called the chloride ion surge, this shift happens even before the estrogen and the LH surge, so these tests give a woman a four-day warning of when she may be ovulating, versus the 12-to-24-hour one that the standard pee-on-a-stick OPKs provide. The key to success in using this latest technology is to make sure to get an accurate baseline of your ion levels (currently, there's a device on the market that needs to be worn on the wrist for at least six continuous hours to get a proper baseline). No OPK can guarantee that you will get pregnant or that you're actually ovulating; they can only indicate when ovulation may be occurring. So no matter which device or method you choose, patience and persistence are key! Just don't forget to put together a candlelit dinner, draw a warm bubble bath, or plan a romantic weekend getaway — whatever it is that puts you and your partner in a baby-making mood.

Good luck — and have fun trying!
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Old 08-27-2007, 05:52 AM
SKConversationalist
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 47
Default Re: How do i know when i am ovulating?

I definitely recommend reading upon the shettles method,"how to choose the sex of your baby" We're working on #8 and have used it every time with successful results! The key is knowing your fertility signs.
Good luck!
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Old 09-19-2007, 06:44 PM
SKPrincess
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Utah
Posts: 6,728
Default Re: How do i know when i am ovulating?

I get my boys by DTD when I get that positive OPK. LOL!

Good luck, you've recieved a lot of helpful info.
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Old 10-09-2007, 06:52 AM
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SKMagnificent
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Ohio
Posts: 1,286
Default Re: How do i know when i am ovulating?

I have 3 boys- trying for a girl! lol Well- I am already pregnant and hoping it is a girl this time! I bought a Ovulation predictor test and it said to start using it on day 9 I think. I never knew when I was ovulating before, and this time I think I ovulated on Sept. 20th or sometime around then. We DTD or BD on the 14th and I did not think I would get pregnant! But I did!

The sperm that creates the boys are faster swimmers, and do not live long. Girls however, are bigger, swim slower but can live up to 5-7 days. I read 5 days and I read 7 so I guess 5-7, although a week is a long time!


I think with all the boys, we DTD right before I ovulated.

There is also an online chart that you can use for predicting your ovulation. It will tell you the days that are optimal for conceiving a boy or a girl (based on your preference) based on your LMP and when your luteal phase is. http://www.yourdays.com/
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The day you deliver, outside will be warm. Your baby will arrive in the evening.After a labor lasting approximately 5 hours, your child, a girl, will be born. Your baby will weigh about 8 pounds, 15 ounces, and will be 17-1/2 inches long. This child will have blue eyes and dark hair.
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