They both had girls first, mum went on to have 2 boys after that. Her sister only had 1 child.
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They both had girls first, mum went on to have 2 boys after that. Her sister only had 1 child.
September
I'm not a girls mom (have two boys) but I was born in April, so dunno about this study
Feb
January
I was born in December, and I have GBG. I have 5 friends with multiple girls/no boys, and their birthdays are in Dec (3 girls), Sept.(3 girls), April(3 girls) August (2 girls), July (2 girls).
I was born in March.
DS-born June
DD1-January
DD2-October
DD3-expected March
Here's a nifty study...birth month in sows may make some difference. PLEASE don't extrapolate this to humans because you can't draw any comparisons really but it is interesting because it shows that there may be something to this seasonal variance.
I actually kinda disagree with the conclusion the researchers draw about maternal condtion and more males in the litter - the male litters were smaller in size and had more stillborns so I am not sure this really seems to indicate what they claim it does. I would suspect that female sows born Sept-Feb would actually be LESS fertile overall due to colder temps/shorter days/less vit D around birth (perhaps releasing less eggs) and fewer animals in the litter tend to = more boys in rats, mice, and sows. So it's like there are actually two causes and effects happening simulaneously and NOT that sows born Sept-FEb are necessarily in better condition.
Just want to reiterate, it is doubtful that there is any magic quality of the month of a pig's birth, it's more likely that SOMETHING like day length, temperature, vit D., overall fertility, that is doing the swaying and not the month you're born in per se.
It would help if I actualy posted the study
http://www.biollett.amu.edu.pl/bioll..._2_111_118.pdf
I'm a March baby with 3 girls.