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Started by Will, February 19, 2018, 09:20:40 AM
Quote from: dejake on February 19, 2018, 10:49:09 AMI close my left eye
Quote from: Bowguy on February 19, 2018, 11:00:25 AMListen to what I'm going to say cause you're gonna hear lots of things about this. I am a certified instructor that teaches lots of newbies a year. Especially kids. We always start out w an eye dominance test. It's extremely important. I only say so to qualify you what I'm saying has basis. Now say you had a shotgun, arrow whatever and pointed it at target righty but aimed w the left eye. Your left eye would view the shot straight. ( try it by closing right eye, mounting and than opening. See where shot is aimed)You're righty stance places the gun to the side. Say you had a bow and sighted in at 15 yards. You actually could get the sight and arrow poi in the same place because of sights. A little further say 20 you'd be off to one side. A little closer off to another. Works that way anytime you use both eyes. You can alleviate that by forcing dominance to the off eye. You ever see guys shoot patched? Ever see sticky markers on one side of a shooting glass? This is compromising the dominant eye by blocking it. You've forced dominance to one eye with a scope. He's prob closing dominant eye or the magnification has the off eye showing dominant. Why not just close one eye someone might ask? Well you lose binocular vision. This aids in depth perception, range estimation. It's also VERY unsafe to shoot a shotgun one eye closed. Pick up a broom. Mount it like a shotgun and have say a poster or next to you. Close one eye and, quickly like you're wingshooting a bird,swing toward the poster that's on the closed eye side. Notice you're dangerously close to the poster before you see it. If you tapped the trigger and swung through like you should you'd possibly put pellets in that poster. Imagine your son shot that way and his little sis was standing next to him. Very dangerous. I do not recommend shooting w a non dominant eye. Please teach him correctly. If you need help PLEASE pm me.
Quote from: Will on February 19, 2018, 09:20:40 AMQuestion for everyone? I've never encountered this issue until my youngest began shooting and is going to start hunting. My son is fine shooting a scope however not so much open sights, mainly a shotgun. It appears he's right handed but left eye dominant. When we shoot open sight B.B. Gun I can watch him adjust. It appears he using his left eye dominant to shoot right handed but this is only after a few misses he figures it out. I'm told the reason he shoots a crossbow fine and slug gun is because of the scope. This is new to me and need some advice on how to deal with the shoutgun for Turkey. He is 11 years old and I'm wondering should I just teach him to shoot left handed considering he is so young or just scope the shotgun for Turkey season? He will be watefowling eventually when he becomes more experienced I guess when I get him shooting good at things in motion. My goal was to involve him skeet shooting this Summer. I'm just wondering has anyone ever dealt with this and if so how did you adjust?ThanksWill
Quote from: silvestris on February 19, 2018, 03:58:54 PMShoot from the eye-dominant shoulder and don't look back. It will be a little uncomfortable for a while and then everything clicks.