K.H. asks from Middle River, MD on October 16, 2008
Tracking Basal Temp for Ovulation and Thermometer Recommendations?
I've just started trying to track my basal temperature to get a feel for my cycle (I was on the pill for 8 years until last month). I thought using a regular digital thermometer would be fine, but my temps are all over the place with 3 huge peaks and troughs, and it's only the 16th day. So I thought maybe I just needed a new thermometer, and bought an actual basal digital thermometer last night. It's the Target brand, but the only basal type available at the store. On a test run last night, and an actual read this morning, it took 4 minutes to get a reading (so slow!), when it claimed a reading in 1 minute. On a second test run this morning, it actually did only take a minute. Plus I was annoyed last night when I first opened the package, tried a test run, and the battery was dead (had to replace it with the old therm battery), so this new thermometer isn't impressing me so far :)
My question is: is there a brand of basal thermometer that anyone recommends? Second, can I really just use a normal digital thermometer? Third, am I doing this right? I'm following all of the no-activity instructions before taking my temp, and it's round about the same time every morning. I have been under alot of stress lately, so maybe that's the reason for the crazy temp swings too. Any advice? Thanks!
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More Answers
S.H. answers from Norfolk on October 17, 2008
HI K.,
I tried using the Basal temp method and finally gave up. I tracked it for about four weeks and never saw a jump in my temp at all. I think the ovulation tests are a better way to go.
A.P. answers from Washington DC on October 17, 2008
You actually do need the basal thermometer because it has two decimal places. If you just have one 98.7 for example you won't be able to see a pattern emerge. It will look basically the same. I used the Target one and did get pregnant, but the first month of charting was weird. Are you using any software? You can go to Fertility Friend online for free software. The correct way to temp is to lay in bed, hardly move at all, take your temp, then get up to pee or whatever. Even though your temps may be all over the place now, after you ovulate you should see a clear shift to higher temps. You can see sample charts online at that website too. Oh and I finally used ovulation predictors too. Since temping only tells you once ovulation is over, it not helpful for the month you are in. Just for you to look back and see what happened last month to try and get the day the next month. I bought 50 OPK's from Baby Hopes, I think. There is a link on Fertility Friend. I was ovulating much later than I thought so I used 28 sticks. If you buy the ones from Target, you get maybe 10 and they are much more expensive.
Good Luck!
A.J. answers from Washington DC on October 17, 2008
A.P. answers from Norfolk on October 17, 2008
We used natural family planning for a while before I got pregnant and I found that you do need a basal digital thermometer. It really is much more accurate. You may have more luck looking online at either drugstore.com or amazon.com. I don't remember the brand I ended up using; it's been a while! It sounds like you're doing it correctly, it just becomes an issue of habit. I kept mine in my nightstand; it eventually became a habit to open my eyes and reach for the thermometer first thing.
Something I found...the first 2 months or so that I did the temperature recording it seemed like I was all over the place. I eventually got a better feel though for how my body worked and it started making mroe sense. It may take a little while to be able to interpret what you're seeing but it will make sense. Good luck!
J.W. answers from Roanoke on October 17, 2008
Taking charge of your fertility---by Toni Weschler
I highly recommend this book. It helped me with charting my temps to see monthly patterns, and find potential problems,i.e. short luteal phase, etc.
I think you can google it and maybe view itin an online version
A.N. answers from Washington DC on October 17, 2008
I used a basal thermometer in 2003 when trying to conceive my 4 y.o. son. I think it was a store brand and I don't think that should matter. This is how I took my temp. You should do it the same time every morning, before you even get out of bed. I was working so I would do it at 5:45 every morning. The alarm would go off and I would reach over take my temp. I was even obsessive about it on vacation...well before I would normally wake up. It took me three months to get pregnant.
I highly recommend a site called fertilityfriend.com. It would track your temps, tell you possible reasons for strange temps, probably ovulation times, best time to get pregnant all based on your numbers. It was great!
If you have any questions, please feel free to e-mail directly.
K.W. answers from Washington DC on October 17, 2008
No answers necessarily, but I just bought two separate thermometers and discovered (after getting my temperature taken at the doctor's) that they were completely out of what (readings of 96 - 97.5, several different readings from the same thermometer, when the doctor's office was 99.7). My determination is that the batteries are useless, and I don't know how to determine whether a thermometer is really working or not! I guess maybe go out and buy a fresh replacement battery?
A.F. answers from Norfolk on October 17, 2008
it is very important that you check temp while just awake and not moving until you have the temp. as soon as you wake..... and the only time it will be accurate, i dont think it really matters the name brand. just that you have a strong battery and dont move till you have that temp. good luck. let us know how it goes. can give more info on when the blocks of time are best but you probably can find that also on the internet for yourself...
A. f.
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