30-16=14, 14days of your cycle is your ovulation date.
you start counting from the very first day of your menses day1 to day14, day14th is your ovulation day.
Learning to do it yourself. I would advice every woman who wants to use the ovulation calender to learn this manual method, even if you will not be using it each month. It gives you a better understanding of what is going on and how to adjust any results given by the computer. It is not usually difficult to do so. You only need to calculate your approximate date of ovulation and add some few days to get a range. That is it, you have your ovulation calendar!Approximate ovulation date = Cycle length - Luteal phase length( or 14 if you don't know it)Example: if your cycle length is 30 days and your luteal phase is 16 days, then the likely date of ovulation will be 30-16 = 14. So on Day 14 of your cycle, you will likely ovulate. Hey, this is not the 14th of the month but Day 14 of your cycle! So counting from the first day of your menses, you will ovulate on the 14th day.Since you cannot be very sure, you may want to add about 2-3 days before and after this date to give you a range of days where you have the highest chances of ovulating and hence your fertile period. For the example above, adding 2 to 14 gives 16 and subtracting 2 from 14 gives 12. So the range is Day 12 to Day 16. You can then go to the paper calender and count the days, marking Day 12 to 16 in red or another color to indicate your fertile period for that month
The 4 phases of menstrual cycle are Menstrual phase, Follicular phase, Ovulation phase and Luteal phase. Menstrual cycle day count starts on the first day of menstruation when blood begins to leak out of the vagina.
The menstrual cycle has three phases:1) Menstruation - this is when bleeding occurs due to the shedding of the endometrium (the uterine lining).2) Follicular phase - this is when the follicles develop. The follicle contains a single ovum, or egg. At the end of this phase ovulation occurs, which is when the egg is released from the follicle.3) Luteal phase - during which the corpus luteum forms. This phase can end with either pregnancy or the degradation of the corpus luteum.
during the luteal phase of your cycle (after ovulation) your temp rises slightly unless you have your period. it is said that if your temp remains elevated for 18 consecutive days after the day you ovulate, you are probably pregnant. hope this helps
All menstrual cycles are different, but if you're assuming this is a 28 day cycle then days 15-28 are likely the luteal phase. This phase follows ovulation, where uterine lining builds-up in preparation for possible pregnancy.
Yes. It isn't common, but it does occur. The reason some women conceive when they are on their periods is because they either have a short cycle or they just ovulate early and have a long luteal phase. You can have sex up to 7 days before ovulation and conceive becasue the sperm can live that long. Sperm life inside the woman's body is generally 3 to 4 days, but they CAN survive for up to 7 days. This means you have a fertile window of UP TO 7 days. So, lets say your period is 7 days long and your cycle is 26 days long. You have sex on day 6 of your cycle - you are still bleeding. Now lets say you ovulate on day 11. This will make your luteal phase 15 days, which is very average. You had sex 5 days before you ovulate so there COULD still be viable sperm waiting to fertilize the egg.It would be very unusual.
Most women ovulate between day 12 and day 18 of their cycle.
On day 10 or 11 usually
In order to know what day you can conceive, you will need to know what day you ovulate. Women ovulate at different times, with some cycles being the typical 28 day cycle (with the 1st day of your period being the 1st day of your new cycle), while others may have much longer or shorter cycles. They now sell ovulation predictor kits over the counter. This will tell you what day you ovulate. In a typical 28 day cycle, you will ovulate around day 14. For a 26 day cycle, you may ovulate earlier--or you may ovulate later. If you ovulate later, then trouble conceiving may be due to a too short luteal phase (the time after you ovulate till your period begins), and you will need to get your progesterone levels checked to see if they are adequate to sustain a pregnancy. But in a normal, healthy woman with no fertility issues, you would typically begin trying to conceive a couple days after menstruation stopped and until about day 18 (or if using an ovulation predictor kit, until the kit tells you that you have ovulated). These days would cover a typical potential fertile period in normal ovulating women (and includes some extra days, in case of late ovulation). By having sexual intercourse every other day or so during this period, you ensure that sperm is present at the time that the egg is released. This will optimize chances for pregnancy, if no other fertility problems are present.
The length of your period is not important, as long as you are ovulating and have a long enough luteal phase. The length of the luteal phase (the time span after you ovulate and until menstruation begins) is critical to being able to get pregnant. A three day period is still considered within the normal range for normal menstruating women. If you have a much shorter period (1 day or less), then it would be a sign to check for other problems, such as non-ovulation and PCOS, since "breakthrough bleeding" is often a symptom of non-ovulation.
on day 14 of your cycle
About day 22, my cycle was this long and that was exatly when I conceived.
When you ovulate depends on your own menstrual cycle and it can change from one cycle to the next - you can sometimes tell when you are ovulating with testing kits but monitoring your cycle with fertility awareness method is the best way to determine when you ovulate. During a typical 28 day cycle a woman will ovulate 14 days BEFORE menstruation, which would also be 14 days into the menstrual cycle (the first day of your period is day one of your menstrual cycle).