Do you still have streaks of leukorrhea after ovulation?

Do I still have streaked leukorrhea after ovulation? Stretched leukorrhea is a clear, stretched leukorrhea that occurs when a woman’s secretions increase during ovulation. The leukorrhea can be stretched very long and is not easily broken, clear, transparent, elastic and egg-white shaped. The day when the leucorrhoea is the most abundant, the thinnest, and the most resistant to pulling is often the day of ovulation. The surprisingly successful use of abstinence during ovulation as a form of contraception in Africa is evidence that it is more scientific to determine ovulation by the pulling of the leucorrhoea. Sometimes after ovulation, there is a change, the lacrimation breaks easily and the leucorrhoea becomes thick and sticky.