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Started by turkeykiller, March 21, 2017, 08:01:11 PM
Quote from: Bowguy on March 21, 2017, 08:23:25 PMHe's dominant eye n hand may not match. Here's another thing is he flinching? 13 years old shouldn't be shooting tons of turkey loads. You ougta be sighting it in n let him use bird loads to practice, maybe just very sparingly turkey loads to check him imo
Quote from: HFultzjr on March 22, 2017, 09:47:25 AMA right handed shooter that is left eye dominant, will usually shoot left.Try the eye test to determine.I would think flinching.Watch him shoot looking closely at his face. My guess he is closing his eyes just before the shot.Get some of the lightest loads your gun will shoot.Put some padding between his shoulder and gun.Good hearing protection is a must, as the bang can cause you to flinch as much as the recoil.Practice at 20 yards with a rest until he is comfortable. Not more than about 10 shots max per outing.Move to 30 yards and repeat a different day.Next outing, a max of 2-3 shots with the load he is using at 30 yards. Too many shots in one outing will cause "recoil anticipation".All this is after you have confirmed that no problems with the gun or sights.Most importantGood sights and sight pictureGood restGood trigger pullGood recoil paddingGood hearing protectionHe will get there, just don't try and do it all in 1 or 2 outings.
Quote from: NFW on March 22, 2017, 10:40:56 AMYeah think a good trigger job such as on a rifle ifs a dedicated turkey gun, might help him not jerking the trigger causing to pull right.
Quote from: HFultzjr on March 22, 2017, 12:11:52 PMHere are some tips on determining eye dominance.http://www.wikihow.com/Determine-Your-Dominant-EyeIf it is inconclusive, he does not have a dominate eye. In the shooting class I teach, I have only seen this 2 times I believe. If that is the case, any open sights will be a nightmare. He could use an eye patch or shooting glasses with one eye blocked. That is what we had to do with the 2 non dominant eyed kids we had. It should not be as much of a problem with a scope, although correct eye relief would be more critical.