If your eyes are bad enough you know there's a sweet spot in your lens where you get the clearest vision. There's a plain correlation with how accurately I can place an arrow and how clearly I can focus on where I want the arrow to go. Finest accuracy is only when looking through the sharpest part of the lens.
Thanks for all the replies. I will ask about distance glasses at my next doctor visit this Spring.
I'm going through this right now; I wear progressives (and Transitions lenses, that darken in the sun) and I have an appointment with an optometrist on FRI who just so happens to be a rifle shooter too. Thus I
will report back my progress or success!I asked about this issue last night during the mid-shoot 10-min break at our weekly indoor league. Surprisingly to me, 3 there were wearing contacts and say they only use them for archery as they too had problems with lenses, especially with progressive lenses. I don't see them outside archery, so I had no idea of their eyesight. For the 4 others (yeah ... we're all old(er), lol!) they all agreed progressive lenses are an issue, where 3 of them were wearing non-progressives for archery-use only.
And to a man ... none of them were ever successful in
turning their head all the way needed to look through that 'tunnel' of clear vision, as was suggested.
My plan is to remove the progressive feature from my shooting eye only (we'll see ...) and eliminate the Transitions darkening in both, making them into just a pair of "shooting glasses". So preferably I'd like to stay with high index polycarbonate lenses, as I also shoot muzzleloaders and other toys that go 'bang'.