Trad Gang
Main Boards => The Shooters FORM Board => Topic started by: Rusty in Fla. on August 07, 2013, 05:02:00 PM
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I've been shooting a bow most of my life and fairly serious for the last 25 years. I shoot right handed even though I'm left handed and left eye dominant. I seem to have reached a plateau and not able to get any better. I feel like I'm in a slump. Close up is no problem but past 15-20 yards things just don't come together.
I'm thinking switching to the left might allow me to start fresh, not learn bad habits and go to a new level.
What say ye?
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I wouldn't switch for that reason. I would shoot from whichever is your dominant eye side. I just recently (end of last year) switched from right to left to match my dominant eye. I didn't find the switch awkward except for nocking the arrow. I saw no increase or decrease in accuracy at any given distance, but I find it easier to shoot varying distances because my range estimation is better with both eyes open. I have to close my left eye when I shoot from the right side.
There may be something similar to the "new gun syndrome", where you pay more attention to the basics when you're shooting something new. That's fine until the newness wears off and you go back to your old bad habits.
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I am left eye dominant and shoot with both eyes open... that may be a thought though, close the left eye when drawing. Hmmm, that's good food for thought.
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If you already shoot with both eyes open and are shooting with the arrow under your non-dominant eye, more than likely you are shooting instinctive in which case it isn't "supposed" to matter what side you shoot from. However, if you reference the arrow at all, you will have a "strange" sight picture to overcome for lack of a better word. I shot decent RH for many years but am left eye dominant.
Since switching to LH a few years back.....I am shooting better than ever. Everything just looks more "normal" now that the arrow is under my dominant eye and I rarely miss right or left anymore since I can see and center my arrow on the target.
Take care,
Jason
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Thanks Jason, I thought that might be the case.
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Do it, and don't look back. Within a week you'll wonder why you didn't start that way. You're right about the habits. When you change sides, you'll be able to control every aspect of your shot sequence.
The only advice I'd give is to use something light to start with.
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Also, you may want to consider going to a shooting school, I went to Rick Welch, if you change from right to left so you can start fresh with perfect form. I went back in April and went from pretty good to Virginia state champion, and am winning most of the 3d shoots I go to.If you really want to reach your potential take his class, but first get you a lefty and practice pulling it back, also recommend his accuracy factory video.
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I was shooting right handed because I am right handed but discovered I wa left eye dominant..got hit in the right eye with a rock when I was a kid but didnt think that would make a difference..well it did..when I would try to shoot instinctive I was all over the place..I was getting so frustrated..A guy told me I needed to switch butI faught it for along time..finnally I tried it and couldnt believe the difference..I was actually hitting where I was aiming..I never looked back..now I have confidence in my shooting and can shoot 20 times better than I was.. dont be stubborn like I was..try it.. it will change your life..
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Switch. I am right handed but left eye dominant. I shoot lefty as does my son. Some say it doesn't matter but I disagree.
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Well now to go bow shopping again.
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I have not made the switch because I have shot both right handed and left handed right from the time I started shooting traditional bows back in 2009...that came naturally from my shooting guns and compound bows that way starting nearly 50 years ago with guns...your situation is your situation...I say this only so that you know it can be done
DDave
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I usually add this as well...a couple of old school archers did exactly what you are thinking about doing...google Glenn St. Charles and Fred Bear sometime
DDave
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I made the switch because of an eye injury.
I have become left eye dominant and have very diminished sight in my right eye.
Long story short, I am 65 years old, and have switched to lefty. The switch kept my shooting alive. You can do it too.
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I'm looking forward to it now I think, it will be like starting all over again. That goes along well with my declining memory. :bigsmyl:
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I swapped from RH to LH due to shoulder issues (from birth). I am R eye dominant, so one would think the switch would make accurate shooting tougher. Not so. I shoot better now as I have better form and more control at the shot (thanks Joel Turner!). Swapping was well worth it for me even though it's cross eye dominant.
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After a decades long break from archery I've rediscovered why I liked it so much as a kid. I'm solidly left handed and very left eye dominant but I grew up shooting everything right handed. When I got back into archery I tried to shoot right handed and couldn't without closing one eye so I switched to left. It took a while for things to feel natural in my hands but it's been well worth the effort. I can train my body to work automatically but I can't shoot well, especially instinctively, with my eyes working manually and one closed.
Love this forum BTW, Thanks for all the great info!
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I am right handed but learned that I am left eye dominant before I started learning to shoot. Took TradGang's collective advice and learned archery using left-handed bows. I can't even imagine what it would be like to shoot right-handed, as it's so natural for me to point at things with my right hand and stare them down with my left eye in charge. :)
I shoot guns left-handed too.
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h im still shooting and ad to switch because of shoulder injury cant say im shooting better than ever buti squint my rt eye and my groups are are getting tighter.
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Making the switch is not as difficult as it sounds. I think that, after a week or so of feeling clumsy with draw and anchor, the hardest part is gonna be changing the rest of your style, that is, the shot will be fine, but moving, sneaking, setting up, all these things were formerly done with a left lead for a right handed shot. It is your natural movement.
You need to change all that too. THAT took me a while longer. But it does change after doing it a lot.
Then, heck, you can shoot BOTH ways and impress folks. . :archer2:
ChuckC
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I did it a long time ago and it only felt awkward for a little while. recently I realized that I wasn't getting the arrow directly under my eye and made a very slight change in my anchor and I have been amazed by the difference! I can't imagine how I would shoot if it was under my non dominant eye. I think you'll like it if you switch, and what the heck if it doesn't work out switch back.
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I switched about 3 years ago after shooting about 37 years right handed. I ended up with a whole different style. I am now shooting better than I ever shot before. All I can tell you is what Jim Castro told me, " concentrate on every shot ". Wish I would have switched years ago. ChuckC is right, setting up while hunting is all backwards. What a trip!
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When I was in my teens I broke my bow two days before the opener. The only bow I could find to borrow was a LH. Shot it for two days and killed a deer opening morning. I still shoot RH but practice both for the fun of it. They say as you get older it helps to use the opposite hand.
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Always shot right-handed, but now that I'm practicing almost everyday, switch to shooting my Kaya KTB left-handed w/ a leather thumb ring on alternate days w/ my Bear B-handle Green Stripe.
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Target panic here switched and now no problem I believe my shooting improved
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I have torn cartiledge in my left shoulder so the switch got me off pain meds my left does a better job pullingthe string back only trouble im rt eye dominant.i will get a reality check at the next 3d shoot in july.thm
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Do not see what Left Or Right eye dominant is all about?? Shot hand guns competitively for years Right hand!! Shoot a bow competitively left hand??Am left eye dominant? Hows this work?
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Have you ever checked to see which eye you're aiming with when pistol shooting? I shot pistol competitively for nearly 20 years until I developed a bad tremor in my right hand. Now I shoot only two handed. I know I aimed with my right eye, but thinking back on it, I might have done even better if I'd canted my head just a bit and shot with my left eye.
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I switch back and forth every shooting session:
- right-handed --- shoot my Bear Custom Kodiak T/D w/ a Black Widow Super Stick Tite glove (anyone know anyone else who makes this pattern, preferrably w/o branding?)
- left-handed --- Kaya KTB w/ a thumbring
It works fine so long as I remember to take my glasses off when shooting the Kaya (right-eye dominant, but shoot w/ both eyes open either way).