No, although you can release multiple eggs you will only ovulate within one 24 hour period within your menstrual cycle. If TTC you should consider using fertility awareness method to determine exactly when you're fertile and when you ovulate, even when not TTC fertility awareness method is very useful for learning more about your body and it can be used as an effective Birth Control method.
The days move as the monthly calendar is not the same as the Lunar cycle.
A "blue moon" has been defined as two full moons in the same month. This can happen in any month except in February. It isn't all that rare; it happens about every other year.Two "blue moons" in the same year can only happen in January and March, which is what happens in 2018. That's because February is the only month in which it's possible to NOT have ANY full moons; February has only 28 days, and a month is 28.5 days!We can expect this (two "blue moons" in the same year) about every 31 years; any time the Moon is full on January 2, it will be full again on January 31, March 2 and March 31.
No month - this is impossible unless you are stood on the North or South Pole when you are in all time zones at the same time
One lunar month is 29.53 days, the time taken from one new moon to the next. The first quarter is 7.3825 days from the new moon phase, one quarter of the lunar month. That's about 7 days and 8 hours.
The moon is on a cycle of redoing it's phases every 29.5 days. Thant is not exactly a month so things would get pushed back.
Most women do not ovulate on the same day each month but rather around the same day. There is a very easy way to learn when you ovulate. See related link.
The only fairly safe days are the first ones when you bleed. During the others you risk pregnancy. A orgasm can make you start ovulate again and only 12% of all women ovulate on the same day each month.
No. The names of the days of the weeks and the names of month are different in different languages.
Your ovulation date will stay the same unless your period due date changes, in this case so will your ovulation date.
During your menstrual cycle there is a period known as safe which is when you don't ovulate. The opposite is the period when you do ovulate which is unsafe if you want to avoid pregnancy. Some couples rely ion this as a contraceptive but it's very unsafe since women don't always ovulate at the same days each month.
The same way you did the first time. There is no way to hurry it up, just focus on about the week before you ovulate and when you ovulate and have sex then.
The only time when you are safe are the first few days of your period. Any other time you can get pregnant and one reason is that a orgasm can make you ovulate again. Also only 12% of all women ovulate on the same day each month and the sperms can live up to 5 days inside of you.
The only sure way is to not have vaginal intercourse. You can also do it on the days when you are sure you do not ovulate and also not a week before that since the sperms can live inside for a week. That means you need to see a doctor to find out exactly when you ovulate and make a schedule and test the urine often since only 12% ovulate on the same day each month.
Yes. A woman is fertile pretty much every day of the month. Only 12% of all women ovulate on the same day every month so unless you check every month you don't know when you ovulate. The sperms also live inside for almost a week. A orgasm can also make you ovulate again.
for most women its 28 days. but its not always the same for all women.
Your ovulation is from one side each month, and each ovary runs on its own cycle. Usually they match and you get your period at the same time each month. This means that if your period is every 30 days, your right ovary drops an ovule (egg) this month. 30 days from now, your left ovary will drop one. 90 days from now your right ovary will activate again and drop an ovule. And so forth. However, if one month you ovulate early, meaning you get your period early a few days, the next month you will ovulate on your original schedule on the opposite side, which means that period will feel late to you, when in reality it is running on its own proper schedule.
You have to see a doctor and make a chart over your cycle. You then have to pee on a stick to find out when you ovulate. This system is far from foolproof since only 12% of all women ovulate the same day each month and if you have a orgasm it can make you start to ovulate again. If that happens you also have to remember that a mans sperm can live inside you up to 5-7 days.