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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
left or right hand?
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<blockquote data-quote="Unofficial Gun Addict (UGA)" data-source="post: 988531" data-attributes="member: 81139"><p>I concur with Missouriman. If she has a prescription for glasses, I'd just stick with the dominant eye. If her eyesight is good, then it's up to you. Thus particular dilemma is going to require some amount of training no matter what you do, however, I do think it's more difficult to train arm, fingers, and shoulder than the eye, if she has good eyesight in the nondominant eye.</p><p></p><p>Put some tape, even matte scotch tape on the dominant eyes shooting glasses lense. Have her shoot as much as you can afford, and even dry fire practice with a pretend gun and scope using this method should train the eye to do what it needs to do, much faster than trying to train all the other moving parts of her body by having her shoot using her nondominant hand.</p><p></p><p>All this goes without saying... That is if she isn't ambidextrous!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Unofficial Gun Addict (UGA), post: 988531, member: 81139"] I concur with Missouriman. If she has a prescription for glasses, I'd just stick with the dominant eye. If her eyesight is good, then it's up to you. Thus particular dilemma is going to require some amount of training no matter what you do, however, I do think it's more difficult to train arm, fingers, and shoulder than the eye, if she has good eyesight in the nondominant eye. Put some tape, even matte scotch tape on the dominant eyes shooting glasses lense. Have her shoot as much as you can afford, and even dry fire practice with a pretend gun and scope using this method should train the eye to do what it needs to do, much faster than trying to train all the other moving parts of her body by having her shoot using her nondominant hand. All this goes without saying... That is if she isn't ambidextrous! [/QUOTE]
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