see the Link below ( fertility timing)
You have your period a fixed 14 days after you ovulate. So if a woman has her period every 21 days, she ovulates on 21-14=7...the 7th day after the 1st day of her period.
According to their online Academic Calendar, it begins on Monday, February 21, 2011.
Depends on how long your periods are normally. In a typical 28 days cycle you ovulate on day 14, conceive on the 15th... it' hard to say without knowing more, but if you were 4-6 weeks on the 15th then count back 2-4 weeks and that gives you an about range.... Most women ovulate 14 days before there period starts, so if you have a 35 day cycle you ovulate around day- 21. If that was the case then your more like 4 weeks vs 6. Hope I helped!
The Chinese calendar is a lunar calendar, which is based on the moons cycle. Chinese new year falls between January 21 and February 19. The next Chinese year will be cycle 78, year 28, the year of the hare and will begin on Gregorian February 3 2011
August and July are the two months in the Gregorian calendar that do not have a solstice or an equinox.
no no ovulation is very impartent
If your period comes every 20-21 days and stays for 5 days your cycle length is 25-26 days. That would not be considered irregular if your cycle length is relatively the same each month. You would ovulate roughly between days 11 and 13 of your cycle. Clomid could be a good way to start fertility treatment when you are trying to conceive but it would be advisable to discuss fertility treatment options with your doctor first.
Ovulation happens before your period. Your period signifies that during ovulation the egg had not been fertilized. The timing is different for all girls and can be very complex to calculate but according to the American Pregnancy Association ovulation typically occurs 11-21 days since the last menstrual period, or 12-16 days from when you expect the next menstrual period to start.
Lapland Calendar was created on 1957-03-21.
No. It doesn't actually end. According to a FAQ list at the NASA website:Just as the calendar you have on your kitchen wall does not cease to exist after December 31, the Mayan calendar does not cease to exist on December 21, 2012. This date is the end of the Mayan long-count period but then -- just as your calendar begins again on January 1 -- another long-count period begins for the Mayan calendar. See the related links section for the full FAQs about this at NASA.
Monday on the Gregorian calendar; Thursday on the Julian calendar
Gregorian calendar: Sunday Julian calendar: Tuesday