Great video. I learned this in the military and had it reinforced as a SWAT operator in law enforcement. Clearing houses, woodland operations, and other fast paced operations do not afford the opportunity to shoot with one eye closed. The biggest issue that I face now teaching individuals to shoot is them saying they can’t do it. When you tell your mind that you can’t do something, guess what… YOU CAN’T. If people would keep an open mind they would find that they could do much more than they ever imagined.
i was told to shoot one eye closed my whole life. "thats the way weve always done it just wasnt cutting it for me. first time i shot both eyes open my dad was suprised at my score and asked me what i did... he still has a hard time adjusting
I'm right handed but left eye dominant. It took me just a few rounds to learn to shoot from my left side. Gun fit was the best video I ever watched. What you're looking at, is what you're aiming at. I still am learning to keep both eyes open. I gotta learn trust.
When I first started shooting Trap I wanted to shoot with both eyes open. It was hard, so I went gradual. Start with both eyes open on the "pull." On Straight-away shots you don't have time to close the weak eye. On the quartering and shots requiring more swing, I let my weak eye squint, but tried to keep it open - but not too hard. Every week my weak eye stayed open longer and longer. I never really thought about it -- I just remembered to keep both eyes open on the "pull." After 4 months of shooting 2 or 3 days a week, I realized I was shooting both eyes open!!
Excellent video, and words of wisdom. I am right handed, left eye dominant and was lucky that my father recognized this when I was young and put me on the " shoot left handed" path. It quickly became natural for shooting both firearms and archery. Ditto for the both eyes open, it can also help with a scoped rifle for acquiring a moving target. as with anything, just takes practice but the benefits are real.
My wife is right handed, but is left eye dominant. I discovered this while I was teaching her to shoot skeet. At the time, I didn’t think it was possible, but then I looked into it a little bit more. So it was easy for her to make the transition to shooting left-handed because she had never really shot anything so I just gave her proper foot position and mounting practice and now she does quite well. Got her a little 28 gauge because she’s recoil sensitive and Bob your uncle. She has yet to break a 25 straight but it’s coming.
I am cross eye dominant. I have plenty of great shots on moving targets with my strong eye closed.. I have tried both eyes open switching sides but the way for me is tried and true method that has killed many squrrels, rabbits, doves, & ducks..
I started shooting USPSA, IDPA, speed steel about 12 years ago and a couple years in I realized I’m right handed and left eye dominant. I put a small piece of scotch tape on the left lens of my glasses. Took a few months of training but I adjusted faster then I thought. Ps always shoot with both eyes open. Even with a scoped rifle in PRS. Love your videos I’m on a shotgun kick right now and enjoying it.
I'm a right handed shooter and right eye dominant. I shoot with both eyes open on crossing shots from the left since i can see down the left side of the barrel. On the crossing shots from the right going left I see double vision of the tip of the barrel with both eyes open so I close my left eye to judge gun speed and lead. I learned this while taking lessons and it helped immensley and I hit right to left crossing shots and birds much easier!
Great videos adressing cross-eye dominance (which is my problem). These are the ways I've dealt with it: 1) at young age, I closed my dominant eye. As you point out this means loss of data, but it still worked not all that bad. 2) At older age (50+), eye sight on non-dominant eye has deteriorated, and dominant eye refuses to close, resulting in many misses. 3) Fix no. 1: Mounting on the other, dominant eye, side: Not successfull even after 3000 repetitions. Maybe I was too old for this shift. 4) Fix no. 2: Two elements: A) Mounted an electronic red ring sight on the barrel. This turns the non-dominant eye dominant, so to say, even with both eyes open. Great: Data from both eyes, and with dominance on the right side. B) One problem still needed to be fixed (this is a bit difficult to explain): While MOUNTING the gun (that is before the electronic red ring comes into sight) it was still the dominant (wrong) eye that leads, so when the gun reaches my shoulder, it aims way left (in my case with left eye dominance). I avoid this problem by fixing adhesive tape at the LOWER part of my glasses on the dominant side. This way, only the the right, non-dominant eye, can see the barrel during the mounting of the gun, and it now points at the intended spot when it hits the shoulder.
I am left eye dominant and shot for 55 years closing one eye just before pulling the trigger. I decided to switch to left hand shooting. It took some time to get used to it as two eyes open was such a different view. After some time I got comfortable with it and now can shoot either left or right. Funny thing is I shoot right with both eyes open now, no trouble. Handy skill in the duck blind as I can switch hands depending on where the ducks are coming from.
I agree, both eyes open shooting clays/shotguns. I just have a hard time doing it. Just a bad habit I'm struggling with. What I've learned is it really makes a negative difference for me when shooting an over under shotgun. Not sure why I haven't been able to break the habit. I teach friends and family and always have them for shotguns with both eyes open. Works much better for them. Not getting my brain to cooperate with me to do the same.
If you've been struggling with cross firing, before going one-eyed, give an occluded front sight (like the Champion Easyhit) a try. Only the gun eye can see the fiber optic. And just because it's there doesn't mean you need to focus on it. Focus both eyes on the target, and let that fuzzy green or red dot in the foreground serve as a cue to help your brain sort out which barrel image to coordinate with the target. If it doesn't work, you're out $25 and you can still stick a dot on your glasses. If it does help, maybe you're still a two-eye shooter rather than a 1.5 or one eye.
I am 66 years old and a right-handed shooter but I am left eye dominant. For most of my hunting career I have been a pretty decent shot. The last few years my accuracy has diminished to the point where I am very frustrated. I have shot left-handed before and can do pretty well and with more experience I think I could become a pretty good shot again. One thing I was thinking about doing was having LASIK surgery on my right eye to improve its vision so I could continue to shoot right-handed. 🤠
Great discussion. I am not cross-eye dominant but something approaching equal-dominant. I have tried for 30+ years to shoot with both eyes open, with minimal success. Recently, I was patterning one of my shotguns and discovered that, when I keep both eyes open, the pattern is 2 feet leftward (alhough left-handed, I shoot right handed -- in line with my more dominant eye, and in line with how I have always played sports) at 30 yards; closing my left eye brings the pattern back to the center. After discussing this with my shooting coach, I decided to go back to shooting with my left eye closed. For reasons that are not clear to me, I don't appear to have this problem with a red dot.....
Try shooting one piece glasses without separate lenses, and then lightly scuff the left side with steel wool. could help your right eye pick up the dominance.
@djka8012 I'd say that's a bit extreme as it's irreversible. Using a chap stick would have a similar effect and you have more control over how big you occlude the eye. Some just need a tiny bit to stop the off eye seeing the bead, others need a larger area.
When my brother and I started shooting trap, I was asked what my dominant eye was and did a test, I'm right eye dominant and a right handed shooter. Another shooter covered the left lense of of my shooting glasses. I hit my first five clays that day😊❤ I also tried to copy a field and stream article on gun hold for each post and it worked too!
I'm cross dominant and I usually shotgun on my dominant eye side (left). Pistol and rifle I shoot right handed but make adjustments (shifting the pistol to my dominant eye). It's been a pain to find properly cast shotgun stocks without paying a fortune.
I like your comments on throw a ball or catching, I tell people, do you close an eye when Tee up a golf ball, swing at a pitch? Then follow with, how many times have you stopped your swing as soon as you hit the golf ball, or shoot a basketball, throw a pitch. Put your stance in neutral, eye on the target, follow thru.
I agree for so many years starting to shoot one eye opened as a kid I missed so much. I am now 40 and in the last few years have retrained myself to shoot both eyes open. My hit rate went up by a large percentage.
I'm a right hand shooter with a left eye dominance. What helps me most, is a mid bead on the gun in combination with shooting from the hip. I anchor the gun to cheek so if the sights are off and not aligned. I can switch dominance on the fly too my right eye. It takes some practice getting use to it. But, it works.
Great video! A couple quick notes are switching shooting sides can be extremely hard even to a totally new shooter. Sometimes it is better to stick to the tape method and let their eyes correct naturally through shooting more. Also one eye can be a great tool for an extremely fast shooter. It can slow them down and slow them to take a better shot. That is personally why I shoot one eyed, but it’s great to see the right recommendation for two eyes. I agree it is generally a better way to go.
Lol love the subtle implication that you're some kind of "extremely fast shooter." It'd be great to see some videos! It's always impressive watching "extremely fast" shooter.
I am cross eyed dominant, left eye dominant - right handed shooter. My under-over shotgun has a midbead and front bead but still had ditticulty shooting 'consistently'. I primarily shoot down the line trap shooting, my eyes were all over the place and was desperately looking for a solution. I removed my front bead and fitted a HiViz Comp Sight, visible only with my right eye, the bright green/red dot is only visible with the eye over the rib and absolute night and day difference in my shooting consistency.
You are the first person to talk about center focus. What are the tips and tricks for the center focuses? In my life I have seen it go hard right, hard left, After Lasik soft right, and now back to glasses....it depends on how tired my eyes are. I can test, blink my eyes a couple times, test again and change eyes.. I am not a shotgun guy, so as I get into it....what are the tips and tricks.
I predominantly have shot 22 Rifles and Bows all my life and I'm now getting into shotgun and trap, I'm right hand and eye dominant but last year I had a medical issue that ended up screwing with my left eye and now I wear glasses and any time i practice with a shotgun for me it feels more comfortable to close that left eye because everything for me farther out is more focused and I can track my targets with a little more ease. I'm a little unsure of having both eyes open I don't know why I am but right now I seem to be way more consistent with my shots when I have my left eye closed. I think Ill do some experimentation with eyes in the future to see if something feels better. I just did the eye dominance tests and now I'm a Right eye Dominant with a center shift.
I’m right handed and right eye dominant. For years I’ve closed my left eye just before shooting but I’ve tried to get accustomed to keeping both eyes open. I seem to see the lead better with left eye closed just before the shot and I usually break more with left eye closed. I know conventional wisdom says both eyes open but it doesn’t work for everyone. One of the best shooters I’ve shot with closes or at least squints his left eye just before shooting.
Another situation where you might have to learn to with only your dominant eye open is if you have had a monovision procedure like I did with cataract surgery. I'm right hand dominant / right eye dominant and that eye sees at distance. My left eye is used for reading up closely. The benefit is I don't have to mess with reading glasses. I've tried to shoot with both eyes open but it confuses the hell out of my eyesight.
Well from your last video I have found that I am right eye dominant, so I will now make the shift from shooting left handed to right handed. I am not really a lefty anyway, I do most things right handed but some things left handed.
I have shot trap for 30 years and for the last year and a half i tried both open. My score has gone down and i have no idea were the gun is pointing. Most of what i hit must be muscle memory and i just went back to one eye and now i can see were the gun is aiming at. I agree with your explanation but also think it is up to the individual.
@@D_Boone I’m the same both eyes open i see 2 guns 😂 shoot 1 eye closed and i win most of the time with the group i go with ! They all shoot both eyes open !
Hello , i am a bit late with my reaction as this video was posted already some time ago. I am a gameshopting instructer myself and i do not agree with you on several items of your shootinginstruction. My personal experience with 99 percent of the gameshooters i meet that they all shoot instinctivly ( read no barrelawereness ) instinctive shooting is based on two things A you need a lot of tallent ( like george digweed ) and B a lot of practise ( forgive me my poor english ) but most people do not have the talent like george or other top shots in the world , so they all end up by doing something on there instinct and have not got the faintest idea where the gun is in ralation to the target when they pull the trigger. If you do not know how you hit it, it does not help you to get experiencd, if you miss you do not know what went wrong so you easyly repeat what you have done wrong with your first shot as you have no idea what went wrong. So shooting with barrel awareness is vital to become a better shot if you see the difference between the target and the gun in the pheripery than you can repeat or change the amount of lead . Another thing shooting with both eyes open is onother thing on its own, i will give you my vieuw on it only if i have the impression you want to hear it from me, which means if i do not hear from you in a reaction of the above we keave it as it is, best reagards Marcus de koff from the Netherlands
@@Marcus-yc1ob - Hello.... I am right eye dominant and shoot off my right shoulder and so I naturally shoot with both eyes open. Binocular vision is very important to good shooting. It makes all the difference in the world. But, if I were left eye dominant I would either have to close my left eye or learn to shoot off my left shoulder.
Can't normally shoot both eyes open on either side. "Rediscovered" something I'd forgotten about recently. Set up reflex sights on shotguns we're using for turkey but was wondering if they'd be in the way for wingshooting or clays. Found I can shoot with both open because only the eye behind the rib can see the sight dot. I remembered there were/are some fiber optic sights with the shooter's end enclosed in an opaque tube, so only the eye over the rib can see it, letting you keep both eyes open but only see the barrel reference with one eye. I'm a poor clay shooter, but instantly went from mid teens on a round to low 20s, being able to leave both eyes open using the reflex sight.
I've found it hard to switch to both eyes open shooting shotguns. When I started shooting IPSC, I took the advise of the pros around me and started shooting pistols with both eyes open and it definitely helped. Not so much the accuracy, but the transition between targets got way faster.
Hi, i was a one eyed shooter for years. I finaly made myself shoot with both eyes open. It took awile but i know am comfortable with it. Because of covid & shoulder & prostste surgery been away from clay shooting for 5 years. Joining a shotgun oriented club. Starting over at 71. Whew.
Growing up I was left eye dom but shot righty because my dad told me and that's what we could afford and I got good. Later in life I found out that my right eye distance was blurry when my left was perfect and I think that played a part. I 100% believe I'm center dominant now after getting glasses but can finally shoot with both eyes open. Does take practice but I can hit just as well!
Crosseye dominant so have to do some stuff unconventionally to make things happen. Sometimes you just gotta do what ya gotta do even if it breaks the rules for you other guys
You have me convinced. Left eye dominant and right handed. Will switch my shotgun to the left side. But, for now, my off the rack over and under has a right hand cast.😕 Still gonna switch and evaluate. Thank you
I am right handed and left eye dominant. I have always shot left handed even as a kid. When I first started shooting shotguns I would use one eye, then went to both eyes open and when the clay was thrown I would go to one eye. I final learned after a couple of years to shoot both eyes open and have become a better shotgun shooter.
Compelling argument, but I use 2 eyes for better target acquisition and end up closing an eye when I pull the trigger. I don't shoot competitively anymore, but I have carded many perfect rounds with the various gauges. If I would dispute anything it would be the idea that you drive with your arm. If I drive with my arm instead of swinging from the hips I find I push the gun away from my face. I view the support arm as more of a pointer, which is why I agree that switching to the weak hand for shooting can be done fairly easily,
Every eye dominance tests indicate I am cross eye dominant. When I mount a shotgun or rifle to my right shoulder with both eyes open my brain picks the left image. If I close my left eye or just partially close it for an instant I then get right eye image and maintain the image even after I open my left eye. If I blink both eyes at the same time I can maintain the right eye image. With both eyes open at the same time staying focused on the target while holding a handgun I can detect two images and I can tell my brain to pick the on the one coming from the right eye.
The problem I am trying to overcome with my red dot (haven't shot clays in years) is that my dominant eye changed at some point. Right handed, left dominant eye so both eyes open with a red dot usually means a heavy head tilt.
Right handed but learned to shoot lefty, bad right eye from birth.. I know my depth perception is compromised so just learned to keep the gun swinging pull through the target then bang. One hunting season had to shoot righty because of shoulder operation, no lead to right but had to double it for left shots.
I’ve watched all 7 or 8 videos of the series along with that many other videos on the same topic. I bought and practiced with over 600 clays in the past 2 or 3 weeks.. my right eye is the dominant eye. But not by much I’m almost center dominant. When I was a kid I remember trying to shoot a BB gun right handed but with my left eye.. I believe through 20 years of sports my right eye has become the dominant eye but not by much. I’ve tried to shim and fit my gun and best as possible. But here’s the thing. I believe to shoot with both eyes open and be proficient. Your mount has to be identical every single time. Mine is not. And being that both eyes are almost as dominant.. with both eyes open I can’t tell if I’m flat on the rib or off to one side or the other when I mount. With one eye open I can tell how to adjust my rear sight (right eye) on the gun. Both eyes I can’t tell what’s going on really
High teal coming toward me, I will miss every time with both eyes open. I learned to shot with one eye closed and now trying to train with both open but know sometimes I need to close an eye
It’s impossible to argue the physiological and psychological facts of two eyes necessary to track velocity (not raw speed only) and distance. That said, I’m right handed, right eye dominant and I’ve every firearm since a preteen with one eye closed. I tried to transition to both eyes open and just cannot get past the double image of the barrel in my field of vision. Scores went down and I went back to one eyed shooting, probably out of impatience. Lately I have been doing this: both eyes open on the call, one eye on hard focus at target acquisition to match target speed, then both eyes open just before the shot. I’m probably confusing the hell out of my brain unnecessarily but it is helping me to be more both eyes open for sporting clays.
It is simple in concept but hard to implement if you’re used to shooting with one eye. If you are seeing double barrels it could be because you are trying to focus on your bead instead of the Target. If your focus is on the Target, you shouldn’t be seeing two barrels. Try getting your eyes focused out on the Target and see if you get a different result.
I always shoot with both eyes open since my right eye suffers from amblyopia. I had to wear eye patches as a small child to force my eye to learn seeing correctly, but to minimum avail. I can see with my right eye, but it's impossible to focus. It's basically just peripheral vision with this eye. As a result, I am left eye dominant and also am a left shooter, everything else is right dominant. So effectively, I have both eyes open with one eye basically non-functional
I tend to squint/close my non-dominant eye. I have been trying to stop, but when I keep both eyes open I go from shooting 70-80% on my sporting clays course, to 30-40%. I know it's wrong, but it's discouraging to try to break the habit and get worse...
I did too. It is common use, to place a piece of tape in front of your non-dom eye to block the "ghost" barrel, I did this many years ago, my 85% on the skeet range (awful) increased into the mid 90's.
I'm right eye dominant but left handed. I have always shot long guns right handed, because that's how I got a good, comfortably cheek weld. I shoot pistol left handed. Weirds out my rangemaster during quals.
Thanks for the great info. I'm cross eye dominate and because of that not so good when it comes to bird hunting. Going to try and shoot from the other side and see how that goes.
I shoot one eye closed, right eye dominate and right handed. Just how I’ve always shot. I shoot both trap and skeet leagues that way. Shot my PR of 23 in both, the 2 missed target probably would be hit with both eyes opened, but I’ve always shot 1 eye closed. Would love to train myself both eyes open though.
I'm left handed and right eye dominant. I shoot pistols left handed but had to teach myself to shoot long guns right handed. Long range rifle I use one eye but for most shotgun stuff I'm both eyes open now.
I am going to try to shoot both eyes open at some skeet this weekend. I was always tought dominate eye open the other closed. See how it goes with both open.
I shoot both eyes open. It really helps on left and right targets. Both eyes open take a little getting use to but once you get it, you will always shoot both eyes open.
This definitely makes sense, my brother lost an eye.he cant even catch a cold!! 😂 But seriously hes cant catch anything. It definitely affected him dramatically. Im left eye dominant, trying to train myself do shoot proficient right handed now
I am near sighted and wear prescription glasses to shoot. My glasses alter my dominant eye, however. Whenever I do the tests without my glasses, I am right eye dominant. With my glasses on, which is the only way I can see well enough to pick up a moving clay, I am left eye dominant. I have not figured out a good solution yet.
Lucky Me. Started around 11 Yrs of age (Before that with a slingshot) Also shoot with both eyes open with a scope( You need periferal vision when following game) . Might close the left when target shooting
I agree that switching sides is possible once you get past the awkwardness. We should give our brains credit for their ability to adapt. It's awkward at first, but the mind adapts fast.
I'm cross dominant and was told to track the target with both eyes open and close my dominant eye before I pull the trigger. Ive been doing this for years. I'm not the best shot but I bag a lot of birds. If I were more serious about those clay games I probably would have changed to shooting left handed years ago. I'm just too far in the game of life to make big changes.
I shot with one eye open fairly well and have recently tried shooting with both eyes open. My scores got drastically worse. I cannot seem to know where the gun is pointed anymore. Very frustrating and makes me want to go back to one eye shooting.
I am very left eye dominant. I am right handed. I can tell you it doesn’t make as big of a difference as people say. I took second at state trap with one eye closed. Just don’t aim and practice practice practice
I agree with you although I never have tried to shoot with both eyes using a shotgun. I try with hand guns and can not get used to it. Its a me problem though. Next time I shoot I will try both eyes open.
I've always been left-handed. I started shooting before I had the strength to hold a full size shotgun up steady. I started shooting right-handed. Much later, I found that I'm right eye dominant.
I’m also left handed and just found out that I am right eye dominant. Been shooting pretty good shotgun from the left side with dominant eye closed. Going to experiment now. Do you shoot rifle from left side?
Here is my dilemma. I am left eye dominant. But not completely. When I focus on the target i see two barrels. I used to try to shoot off my left shoulder. Since I now have a pacemaker i am forced to shoot off my right shoulder. I have learned the barrel on the left is the correct one. Should I continue to train myself to shoot with both eyes open?
So I am center with "maybe" right eye dominating. Finger pointing method when I close one eye my first version is off to one side for both eyes. When I look down my gun focused on the bird my eyes see to barrels equally. I was told to look over the bead and focus on the target but it's not working anymore. 25 years ago it worked great, but not now. Help, I always go to one eye or back and forth and my shooting is terrible now.
The sports analogies always talk about hitting a baseball or tennis or the like; this is based on convergence of the eyes which is WAY more important as something comes within a few feet of you. Up real close. Things moving away from you don't have much of an effect with this. Things moving side to side make you use "smooth pursuits" ; this can be done with one eye without problem and is why that elite trap shooter you mention does just fine using mostly single eye shooting.
I should note, I do think it's best to shoot with both eyes open, unless perhaps you are cross dominant and want to stay on the side of your dominant hand...just know that with enough practice you can probably make it work fine enough.
Both of my eyes fight for dominance when I have them open. My left which isn't typically dominant and doesn't meet the line test tends to try to be the one to focus in because when I went to the Opthamologist tested it had better vision. Started closing my left eye and I'm breaking clays now. I will say it makes it harder to get high house in skeet with my left eye closed though. But it's a handicap I'm going to try to beat. It's more of a lead problem now that I've got used to the left eye closed. I think it comes down to the individual.
The short answer is: it depends. In most cases, where you are not using an LPVO for long distances, you should shoot with both eyes open to maintain situational awareness.
Im Right handed , Right Shooter, crosseye dominance. On drivenhunt i shoot both eyed open with a red dot sight, or left eyed closed on drivenscope. At Shotgun shooting, i wear a shooting glas With dotted tape on the Center from the left eye. So i can shoot both eye open, and take better lead. Without Glasses, im Close the left to find the the perfekt Mount and slightly open or blink the left eye. My poor brain switch automatic to the Right eye dominance.
It just depends on how you learn sometimes it's better for some people to shoot "targets" with both eyes open and sometimes it's better with one eye closed it really just depends on the person and the training. My left eye is messed up spots and lines so I always shut it no matter what I shoot TARGETS. EXCEPT when i shoot at flying skeets or birds haha
I want to try two eyes, but I need one closed to make sure I'm looking down the rib. Once I dial my mounting technique then I'll add the left eye, though it has such an asitgmatism it's probably not that helpful. My hunting partner only has one eye, he's a pretty good shot still. 🤷♂️
I started life as a rifleman, then in 1980 got involved I the shotgun and into Olympic Trap. I shoot one eyed to this day at age 76. Don't think I will be changing anytime soon.
For all clay sports I have both eyes open when calling the bird and then after seeing the bird…. I then close my left eye…. Then shoot. Works for me. I have and can shoot with both eyes open… but I don’t have confidence in doing it… to trust it.
I am right strong eyed. But I have mono vision. My right eye is for seeing thing close to me and my left is the opposite. So for me shooting still or moving targets the sights and target are very focused. I am also a two eyed shooter and have glasses that enhance my mono vision. So for me the target and sights are clear view. I do point shoot, but at the same time I would say I am almost aiming the the shotgun.
I started shooting clays again after probably 30 years. Didn't know i had cross eye dominance. Tried shooting left handed. Have a very hard time with crossing target. Put tape on glasses seems to help a lot. Going to try and see an eye Dr who specializes in shooting.
I actually have a condition where my eyes uncontrollably have a "vibration" that's the best I can describe it. Now if I close one of my eyes this inensifyes so I shoot everything both eyes open except rifles with a scope.
It makes me feel like thr barrel isnt aligned when my left eye is open but if i close and open my left eye while aiming i notice the bead is pointing at the same thing both times. So i can use both eyes and just point it now that the shotgun has my confidence.
I'm very right handed and very left eye dominant. I have tried shooting left handed but that is honestly a danger to anyone near me ;) I also have quite a few thousands rounds on my AR, shouldered on my right side making for a lot of muscle memory. I'm going to try shooting with a red dot sight on my shotgun to draw the attention of my eyes over to the right, and see if that is something that can help build the required hand-eye coordination to a level where the red dot might no longer be needed.
I began shooting with both eyes open and with my messed up eyes it made it impossible to shoot consistently, until my eye doctor told me to shoot with my left eye closed and now i shoot much much better.
I'm 62 now been shooting left handed for about 55 of them with 1 eye,,,,back in the day a left hand guns were far & few, once you get enough powder burns it's hard to keep that right eye open. Safety glasses were unheard of, I'm not the best shot but manage to get 15 limit of dove in less than a box of shells,,, The pros get paid to do that job i myself do it for fun,, may hit 23 out of 25 clays but I can live with that. What ever works for you then go for it.
Great video. I learned this in the military and had it reinforced as a SWAT operator in law enforcement. Clearing houses, woodland operations, and other fast paced operations do not afford the opportunity to shoot with one eye closed. The biggest issue that I face now teaching individuals to shoot is them saying they can’t do it. When you tell your mind that you can’t do something, guess what… YOU CAN’T. If people would keep an open mind they would find that they could do much more than they ever imagined.
i was told to shoot one eye closed my whole life. "thats the way weve always done it just wasnt cutting it for me. first time i shot both eyes open my dad was suprised at my score and asked me what i did... he still has a hard time adjusting
I'm right handed but left eye dominant. It took me just a few rounds to learn to shoot from my left side. Gun fit was the best video I ever watched. What you're looking at, is what you're aiming at. I still am learning to keep both eyes open. I gotta learn trust.
What video was that?
When I first started shooting Trap I wanted to shoot with both eyes open. It was hard, so I went gradual. Start with both eyes open on the "pull." On Straight-away shots you don't have time to close the weak eye. On the quartering and shots requiring more swing, I let my weak eye squint, but tried to keep it open - but not too hard. Every week my weak eye stayed open longer and longer. I never really thought about it -- I just remembered to keep both eyes open on the "pull." After 4 months of shooting 2 or 3 days a week, I realized I was shooting both eyes open!!
Exactly what I do
Excellent video, and words of wisdom. I am right handed, left eye dominant and was lucky that my father recognized this when I was young and put me on the " shoot left handed" path. It quickly became natural for shooting both firearms and archery. Ditto for the both eyes open, it can also help with a scoped rifle for acquiring a moving target. as with anything, just takes practice but the benefits are real.
Just out of curiosity do you shoot a handgun right handed or left?
Just out of curiosity do you shoot a handgun right handed or left?
My wife is right handed, but is left eye dominant. I discovered this while I was teaching her to shoot skeet. At the time, I didn’t think it was possible, but then I looked into it a little bit more. So it was easy for her to make the transition to shooting left-handed because she had never really shot anything so I just gave her proper foot position and mounting practice and now she does quite well. Got her a little 28 gauge because she’s recoil sensitive and Bob your uncle. She has yet to break a 25 straight but it’s coming.
I am cross eye dominant. I have plenty of great shots on moving targets with my strong eye closed.. I have tried both eyes open switching sides but the way for me is tried and true method that has killed many squrrels, rabbits, doves, & ducks..
I started shooting USPSA, IDPA, speed steel about 12 years ago and a couple years in I realized I’m right handed and left eye dominant. I put a small piece of scotch tape on the left lens of my glasses. Took a few months of training but I adjusted faster then I thought. Ps always shoot with both eyes open. Even with a scoped rifle in PRS. Love your videos I’m on a shotgun kick right now and enjoying it.
I'm a right handed shooter and right eye dominant. I shoot with both eyes open on crossing shots from the left since i can see down the left side of the barrel. On the crossing shots from the right going left I see double vision of the tip of the barrel with both eyes open so I close my left eye to judge gun speed and lead. I learned this while taking lessons and it helped immensley and I hit right to left crossing shots and birds much easier!
Great videos adressing cross-eye dominance (which is my problem). These are the ways I've dealt with it: 1) at young age, I closed my dominant eye. As you point out this means loss of data, but it still worked not all that bad. 2) At older age (50+), eye sight on non-dominant eye has deteriorated, and dominant eye refuses to close, resulting in many misses. 3) Fix no. 1: Mounting on the other, dominant eye, side: Not successfull even after 3000 repetitions. Maybe I was too old for this shift. 4) Fix no. 2: Two elements: A) Mounted an electronic red ring sight on the barrel. This turns the non-dominant eye dominant, so to say, even with both eyes open. Great: Data from both eyes, and with dominance on the right side. B) One problem still needed to be fixed (this is a bit difficult to explain): While MOUNTING the gun (that is before the electronic red ring comes into sight) it was still the dominant (wrong) eye that leads, so when the gun reaches my shoulder, it aims way left (in my case with left eye dominance). I avoid this problem by fixing adhesive tape at the LOWER part of my glasses on the dominant side. This way, only the the right, non-dominant eye, can see the barrel during the mounting of the gun, and it now points at the intended spot when it hits the shoulder.
I am left eye dominant and shot for 55 years closing one eye just before pulling the trigger. I decided to switch to left hand shooting. It took some time to get used to it as two eyes open was such a different view. After some time I got comfortable with it and now can shoot either left or right. Funny thing is I shoot right with both eyes open now, no trouble. Handy skill in the duck blind as I can switch hands depending on where the ducks are coming from.
I agree, both eyes open shooting clays/shotguns. I just have a hard time doing it. Just a bad habit I'm struggling with. What I've learned is it really makes a negative difference for me when shooting an over under shotgun. Not sure why I haven't been able to break the habit. I teach friends and family and always have them for shotguns with both eyes open. Works much better for them. Not getting my brain to cooperate with me to do the same.
If you've been struggling with cross firing, before going one-eyed, give an occluded front sight (like the Champion Easyhit) a try. Only the gun eye can see the fiber optic. And just because it's there doesn't mean you need to focus on it. Focus both eyes on the target, and let that fuzzy green or red dot in the foreground serve as a cue to help your brain sort out which barrel image to coordinate with the target. If it doesn't work, you're out $25 and you can still stick a dot on your glasses. If it does help, maybe you're still a two-eye shooter rather than a 1.5 or one eye.
I am 66 years old and a right-handed shooter but I am left eye dominant. For most of my hunting career I have been a pretty decent shot. The last few years my accuracy has diminished to the point where I am very frustrated. I have shot left-handed before and can do pretty well and with more experience I think I could become a pretty good shot again. One thing I was thinking about doing was having LASIK surgery on my right eye to improve its vision so I could continue to shoot right-handed. 🤠
Great discussion. I am not cross-eye dominant but something approaching equal-dominant. I have tried for 30+ years to shoot with both eyes open, with minimal success. Recently, I was patterning one of my shotguns and discovered that, when I keep both eyes open, the pattern is 2 feet leftward (alhough left-handed, I shoot right handed -- in line with my more dominant eye, and in line with how I have always played sports) at 30 yards; closing my left eye brings the pattern back to the center. After discussing this with my shooting coach, I decided to go back to shooting with my left eye closed. For reasons that are not clear to me, I don't appear to have this problem with a red dot.....
Try shooting one piece glasses without separate lenses, and then lightly scuff the left side with steel wool.
could help your right eye pick up the dominance.
@djka8012 I'd say that's a bit extreme as it's irreversible. Using a chap stick would have a similar effect and you have more control over how big you occlude the eye. Some just need a tiny bit to stop the off eye seeing the bead, others need a larger area.
When my brother and I started shooting trap, I was asked what my dominant eye was and did a test, I'm right eye dominant and a right handed shooter.
Another shooter covered the left lense of of my shooting glasses.
I hit my first five clays that day😊❤
I also tried to copy a field and stream article on gun hold for each post and it worked too!
I'm cross dominant and I usually shotgun on my dominant eye side (left). Pistol and rifle I shoot right handed but make adjustments (shifting the pistol to my dominant eye). It's been a pain to find properly cast shotgun stocks without paying a fortune.
I like your comments on throw a ball or catching, I tell people, do you close an eye when Tee up a golf ball, swing at a pitch? Then follow with, how many times have you stopped your swing as soon as you hit the golf ball, or shoot a basketball, throw a pitch. Put your stance in neutral, eye on the target, follow thru.
I agree for so many years starting to shoot one eye opened as a kid I missed so much. I am now 40 and in the last few years have retrained myself to shoot both eyes open. My hit rate went up by a large percentage.
I'm a right hand shooter with a left eye dominance. What helps me most, is a mid bead on the gun in combination with shooting from the hip. I anchor the gun to cheek so if the sights are off and not aligned. I can switch dominance on the fly too my right eye. It takes some practice getting use to it. But, it works.
Great video! A couple quick notes are switching shooting sides can be extremely hard even to a totally new shooter. Sometimes it is better to stick to the tape method and let their eyes correct naturally through shooting more. Also one eye can be a great tool for an extremely fast shooter. It can slow them down and slow them to take a better shot. That is personally why I shoot one eyed, but it’s great to see the right recommendation for two eyes. I agree it is generally a better way to go.
Lol love the subtle implication that you're some kind of "extremely fast shooter." It'd be great to see some videos! It's always impressive watching "extremely fast" shooter.
As someone who’s shot clay sports for 15 years and now coach a high school team. I’ve never seen a better video on this subject
I am cross eyed dominant, left eye dominant - right handed shooter.
My under-over shotgun has a midbead and front bead but still had ditticulty shooting 'consistently'. I primarily shoot down the line trap shooting, my eyes were all over the place and was desperately looking for a solution.
I removed my front bead and fitted a HiViz Comp Sight, visible only with my right eye, the bright green/red dot is only visible with the eye over the rib and absolute night and day difference in my shooting consistency.
You are the first person to talk about center focus. What are the tips and tricks for the center focuses?
In my life I have seen it go hard right, hard left, After Lasik soft right, and now back to glasses....it depends on how tired my eyes are. I can test, blink my eyes a couple times, test again and change eyes.. I am not a shotgun guy, so as I get into it....what are the tips and tricks.
I predominantly have shot 22 Rifles and Bows all my life and I'm now getting into shotgun and trap, I'm right hand and eye dominant but last year I had a medical issue that ended up screwing with my left eye and now I wear glasses and any time i practice with a shotgun for me it feels more comfortable to close that left eye because everything for me farther out is more focused and I can track my targets with a little more ease. I'm a little unsure of having both eyes open I don't know why I am but right now I seem to be way more consistent with my shots when I have my left eye closed. I think Ill do some experimentation with eyes in the future to see if something feels better. I just did the eye dominance tests and now I'm a Right eye Dominant with a center shift.
Loved your creativity in presenting this. Also appreciate the effort put into this video. Great job!
I’m right handed and right eye dominant. For years I’ve closed my left eye just before shooting but I’ve tried to get accustomed to keeping both eyes open. I seem to see the lead better with left eye closed just before the shot and I usually break more with left eye closed. I know conventional wisdom says both eyes open but it doesn’t work for everyone. One of the best shooters I’ve shot with closes or at least squints his left eye just before shooting.
Another situation where you might have to learn to with only your dominant eye open is if you have had a monovision procedure like I did with cataract surgery. I'm right hand dominant / right eye dominant and that eye sees at distance. My left eye is used for reading up closely. The benefit is I don't have to mess with reading glasses. I've tried to shoot with both eyes open but it confuses the hell out of my eyesight.
Well from your last video I have found that I am right eye dominant, so I will now make the shift from shooting left handed to right handed. I am not really a lefty anyway, I do most things right handed but some things left handed.
I have shot trap for 30 years and for the last year and a half i tried both open. My score has gone down and i have no idea were the gun is pointing. Most of what i hit must be muscle memory and i just went back to one eye and now i can see were the gun is aiming at. I agree with your explanation but also think it is up to the individual.
Exactly! I'm seeing a double image and it's just too much to process.
I'm assuming you shoot off your right shoulder.
Your problem is that your left eye is your master eye (cross-eye dominant.)
@@D_Boone I’m the same both eyes open i see 2 guns 😂 shoot 1 eye closed and i win most of the time with the group i go with ! They all shoot both eyes open !
Hello , i am a bit late with my reaction as this video was posted already some time ago. I am a gameshopting instructer myself and i do not agree with you on several items of your shootinginstruction. My personal experience with 99 percent of the gameshooters i meet that they all shoot instinctivly ( read no barrelawereness ) instinctive shooting is based on two things A you need a lot of tallent ( like george digweed ) and B a lot of practise ( forgive me my poor english ) but most people do not have the talent like george or other top shots in the world , so they all end up by doing something on there instinct and have not got the faintest idea where the gun is in ralation to the target when they pull the trigger. If you do not know how you hit it, it does not help you to get experiencd, if you miss you do not know what went wrong so you easyly repeat what you have done wrong with your first shot as you have no idea what went wrong. So shooting with barrel awareness is vital to become a better shot if you see the difference between the target and the gun in the pheripery than you can repeat or change the amount of lead . Another thing shooting with both eyes open is onother thing on its own, i will give you my vieuw on it only if i have the impression you want to hear it from me, which means if i do not hear from you in a reaction of the above we keave it as it is, best reagards Marcus de koff from the Netherlands
@@Marcus-yc1ob - Hello....
I am right eye dominant and shoot off my right shoulder and so I naturally shoot with both eyes open.
Binocular vision is very important to good shooting. It makes all the difference in the world. But, if I were left eye dominant I would either have to close my left eye or learn to shoot off my left shoulder.
Can't normally shoot both eyes open on either side. "Rediscovered" something I'd forgotten about recently. Set up reflex sights on shotguns we're using for turkey but was wondering if they'd be in the way for wingshooting or clays. Found I can shoot with both open because only the eye behind the rib can see the sight dot. I remembered there were/are some fiber optic sights with the shooter's end enclosed in an opaque tube, so only the eye over the rib can see it, letting you keep both eyes open but only see the barrel reference with one eye. I'm a poor clay shooter, but instantly went from mid teens on a round to low 20s, being able to leave both eyes open using the reflex sight.
Great video! I'm left eye dominate and have shot left handed all my life with great results!
I always shot one close but I will try it out
I've found it hard to switch to both eyes open shooting shotguns. When I started shooting IPSC, I took the advise of the pros around me and started shooting pistols with both eyes open and it definitely helped. Not so much the accuracy, but the transition between targets got way faster.
Hi, i was a one eyed shooter for years. I finaly made myself shoot with both eyes open. It took awile but i know am comfortable with it. Because of covid & shoulder & prostste surgery been away from clay shooting for 5 years. Joining a shotgun oriented club. Starting over at 71. Whew.
RH/LE shooter here. Unfortunately, I suffered left shoulder injury, and the recoil can get painful. So I shoot RH, LE closed. Guess I'm an exception.
Growing up I was left eye dom but shot righty because my dad told me and that's what we could afford and I got good.
Later in life I found out that my right eye distance was blurry when my left was perfect and I think that played a part. I 100% believe I'm center dominant now after getting glasses but can finally shoot with both eyes open. Does take practice but I can hit just as well!
Im Cross dominate, i have started shooting left handed im right handed. It was a little strange at first, but I'm smashing it now 👍
Crosseye dominant so have to do some stuff unconventionally to make things happen. Sometimes you just gotta do what ya gotta do even if it breaks the rules for you other guys
You have me convinced. Left eye dominant and right handed. Will switch my shotgun to the left side. But, for now, my off the rack over and under has a right hand cast.😕 Still gonna switch and evaluate.
Thank you
Let us know how it goes.
I am right handed and left eye dominant. I have always shot left handed even as a kid. When I first started shooting shotguns I would use one eye, then went to both eyes open and when the clay was thrown I would go to one eye. I final learned after a couple of years to shoot both eyes open and have become a better shotgun shooter.
Compelling argument, but I use 2 eyes for better target acquisition and end up closing an eye when I pull the trigger. I don't shoot competitively anymore, but I have carded many perfect rounds with the various gauges. If I would dispute anything it would be the idea that you drive with your arm. If I drive with my arm instead of swinging from the hips I find I push the gun away from my face. I view the support arm as more of a pointer, which is why I agree that switching to the weak hand for shooting can be done fairly easily,
Every eye dominance tests indicate I am cross eye dominant. When I mount a shotgun or rifle to my right shoulder with both eyes open my brain picks the left image. If I close my left eye or just partially close it for an instant I then get right eye image and maintain the image even after I open my left eye. If I blink both eyes at the same time I can maintain the right eye image.
With both eyes open at the same time staying focused on the target while holding a handgun I can detect two images and I can tell my brain to pick the on the one coming from the right eye.
I like to watch it come in and get an idea of the arc and speed both eyes open and then close one when your ready to shoot
The problem I am trying to overcome with my red dot (haven't shot clays in years) is that my dominant eye changed at some point. Right handed, left dominant eye so both eyes open with a red dot usually means a heavy head tilt.
Right handed but learned to shoot lefty, bad right eye from birth.. I know my depth perception is compromised so just learned to keep the gun swinging pull through the target then bang. One hunting season had to shoot righty because of shoulder operation, no lead to right but had to double it for left shots.
I’ve watched all 7 or 8 videos of the series along with that many other videos on the same topic. I bought and practiced with over 600 clays in the past 2 or 3 weeks.. my right eye is the dominant eye. But not by much I’m almost center dominant. When I was a kid I remember trying to shoot a BB gun right handed but with my left eye.. I believe through 20 years of sports my right eye has become the dominant eye but not by much. I’ve tried to shim and fit my gun and best as possible. But here’s the thing. I believe to shoot with both eyes open and be proficient. Your mount has to be identical every single time. Mine is not. And being that both eyes are almost as dominant.. with both eyes open I can’t tell if I’m flat on the rib or off to one side or the other when I mount. With one eye open I can tell how to adjust my rear sight (right eye) on the gun. Both eyes I can’t tell what’s going on really
High teal coming toward me, I will miss every time with both eyes open. I learned to shot with one eye closed and now trying to train with both open but know sometimes I need to close an eye
It’s impossible to argue the physiological and psychological facts of two eyes necessary to track velocity (not raw speed only) and distance. That said, I’m right handed, right eye dominant and I’ve every firearm since a preteen with one eye closed. I tried to transition to both eyes open and just cannot get past the double image of the barrel in my field of vision. Scores went down and I went back to one eyed shooting, probably out of impatience.
Lately I have been doing this: both eyes open on the call, one eye on hard focus at target acquisition to match target speed, then both eyes open just before the shot. I’m probably confusing the hell out of my brain unnecessarily but it is helping me to be more both eyes open for sporting clays.
It is simple in concept but hard to implement if you’re used to shooting with one eye. If you are seeing double barrels it could be because you are trying to focus on your bead instead of the Target. If your focus is on the Target, you shouldn’t be seeing two barrels. Try getting your eyes focused out on the Target and see if you get a different result.
I always shoot with both eyes open since my right eye suffers from amblyopia. I had to wear eye patches as a small child to force my eye to learn seeing correctly, but to minimum avail. I can see with my right eye, but it's impossible to focus. It's basically just peripheral vision with this eye.
As a result, I am left eye dominant and also am a left shooter, everything else is right dominant.
So effectively, I have both eyes open with one eye basically non-functional
I tend to squint/close my non-dominant eye. I have been trying to stop, but when I keep both eyes open I go from shooting 70-80% on my sporting clays course, to 30-40%. I know it's wrong, but it's discouraging to try to break the habit and get worse...
Me too...
I did too. It is common use, to place a piece of tape in front of your non-dom eye to block the "ghost" barrel, I did this many years ago, my 85% on the skeet range (awful) increased into the mid 90's.
Are you sure your shotgun fits and your mount is consistent? Focusing 100% on the bird and not the bead?
I'm right eye dominant but left handed. I have always shot long guns right handed, because that's how I got a good, comfortably cheek weld. I shoot pistol left handed. Weirds out my rangemaster during quals.
I focus on the target with 2 eyes and close the left eye to ensure the lead is OK if time allows. Not on skeet station 8 for instance.
Thanks Steve - i will try with both eyes open.
Thanks for the great info. I'm cross eye dominate and because of that not so good when it comes to bird hunting. Going to try and shoot from the other side and see how that goes.
I shoot one eye closed, right eye dominate and right handed. Just how I’ve always shot. I shoot both trap and skeet leagues that way. Shot my PR of 23 in both, the 2 missed target probably would be hit with both eyes opened, but I’ve always shot 1 eye closed. Would love to train myself both eyes open though.
I'm left handed and right eye dominant. I shoot pistols left handed but had to teach myself to shoot long guns right handed. Long range rifle I use one eye but for most shotgun stuff I'm both eyes open now.
I am going to try to shoot both eyes open at some skeet this weekend. I was always tought dominate eye open the other closed. See how it goes with both open.
I shoot both eyes open. It really helps on left and right targets. Both eyes open take a little getting use to but once you get it, you will always shoot both eyes open.
This definitely makes sense, my brother lost an eye.he cant even catch a cold!! 😂 But seriously hes cant catch anything. It definitely affected him dramatically. Im left eye dominant, trying to train myself do shoot proficient right handed now
I am near sighted and wear prescription glasses to shoot. My glasses alter my dominant eye, however. Whenever I do the tests without my glasses, I am right eye dominant. With my glasses on, which is the only way I can see well enough to pick up a moving clay, I am left eye dominant. I have not figured out a good solution yet.
Lucky Me. Started around 11 Yrs of age (Before that with a slingshot) Also shoot with both eyes open with a scope( You need periferal vision when following game) . Might close the left when target shooting
You have talked me in to it, gonna try my ,left.
I agree that switching sides is possible once you get past the awkwardness. We should give our brains credit for their ability to adapt. It's awkward at first, but the mind adapts fast.
I'm cross dominant and was told to track the target with both eyes open and close my dominant eye before I pull the trigger. Ive been doing this for years. I'm not the best shot but I bag a lot of birds. If I were more serious about those clay games I probably would have changed to shooting left handed years ago. I'm just too far in the game of life to make big changes.
I shot with one eye open fairly well and have recently tried shooting with both eyes open. My scores got drastically worse. I cannot seem to know where the gun is pointed anymore. Very frustrating and makes me want to go back to one eye shooting.
I am very left eye dominant. I am right handed. I can tell you it doesn’t make as big of a difference as people say. I took second at state trap with one eye closed. Just don’t aim and practice practice practice
Your message makes a lot of sense
I acquire the target with both eyes open then shoot or “aim” with only 1 eye open, dunno just works for me
I'm right eye dominant. I close my left eye.This is my involuntary state😂😂believe me.
As always superb, you're awesome bro.👍🌹
I agree with you although I never have tried to shoot with both eyes using a shotgun. I try with hand guns and can not get used to it. Its a me problem though. Next time I shoot I will try both eyes open.
I've always been left-handed. I started shooting before I had the strength to hold a full size shotgun up steady. I started shooting right-handed. Much later, I found that I'm right eye dominant.
I’m also left handed and just found out that I am right eye dominant. Been shooting pretty good shotgun from the left side with dominant eye closed. Going to experiment now. Do you shoot rifle from left side?
@@CaptMylo I shoot everything from the right side, pistol too. That is just how everyone I knew did it, so I did too.
Here is my dilemma. I am left eye dominant. But not completely. When I focus on the target i see two barrels. I used to try to shoot off my left shoulder. Since I now have a pacemaker i am forced to shoot off my right shoulder. I have learned the barrel on the left is the correct one. Should I continue to train myself to shoot with both eyes open?
right handed left eye dominant with means I will see double while trying to focus on the target.
So I am center with "maybe" right eye dominating. Finger pointing method when I close one eye my first version is off to one side for both eyes. When I look down my gun focused on the bird my eyes see to barrels equally. I was told to look over the bead and focus on the target but it's not working anymore. 25 years ago it worked great, but not now. Help, I always go to one eye or back and forth and my shooting is terrible now.
The sports analogies always talk about hitting a baseball or tennis or the like; this is based on convergence of the eyes which is WAY more important as something comes within a few feet of you. Up real close. Things moving away from you don't have much of an effect with this. Things moving side to side make you use "smooth pursuits" ; this can be done with one eye without problem and is why that elite trap shooter you mention does just fine using mostly single eye shooting.
I should note, I do think it's best to shoot with both eyes open, unless perhaps you are cross dominant and want to stay on the side of your dominant hand...just know that with enough practice you can probably make it work fine enough.
Both of my eyes fight for dominance when I have them open. My left which isn't typically dominant and doesn't meet the line test tends to try to be the one to focus in because when I went to the Opthamologist tested it had better vision. Started closing my left eye and I'm breaking clays now. I will say it makes it harder to get high house in skeet with my left eye closed though. But it's a handicap I'm going to try to beat. It's more of a lead problem now that I've got used to the left eye closed. I think it comes down to the individual.
Great video and topic. How to do is just as important as having the right equipment.
Please do a comparison with the 940 JM Pro.
The short answer is: it depends. In most cases, where you are not using an LPVO for long distances, you should shoot with both eyes open to maintain situational awareness.
I'm right handed but left eye dominant so I shoot trap with my left hand it is weird at first but I got used to it
What shooting glasses do you use?
Extra points to you (and your team) for self-correcting does to do-way to go and thanks for the laugh with a good does of education.
Im Right handed , Right Shooter, crosseye dominance. On drivenhunt i shoot both eyed open with a red dot sight, or left eyed closed on drivenscope.
At Shotgun shooting, i wear a shooting glas With dotted tape on the Center from the left eye. So i can shoot both eye open, and take better lead. Without Glasses, im Close the left to find the the perfekt Mount and slightly open or blink the left eye. My poor brain switch automatic to the Right eye dominance.
It just depends on how you learn sometimes it's better for some people to shoot "targets" with both eyes open and sometimes it's better with one eye closed it really just depends on the person and the training.
My left eye is messed up spots and lines so I always shut it no matter what I shoot TARGETS.
EXCEPT when i shoot at flying skeets or birds haha
I want to try two eyes, but I need one closed to make sure I'm looking down the rib. Once I dial my mounting technique then I'll add the left eye, though it has such an asitgmatism it's probably not that helpful.
My hunting partner only has one eye, he's a pretty good shot still. 🤷♂️
I started life as a rifleman, then in 1980 got involved I the shotgun and into Olympic Trap. I shoot one eyed to this day at age 76. Don't think I will be changing anytime soon.
For all clay sports I have both eyes open when calling the bird and then after seeing the bird…. I then close my left eye…. Then shoot. Works for me. I have and can shoot with both eyes open… but I don’t have confidence in doing it… to trust it.
I am right strong eyed. But I have mono vision. My right eye is for seeing thing close to me and my left is the opposite. So for me shooting still or moving targets the sights and target are very focused. I am also a two eyed shooter and have glasses that enhance my mono vision. So for me the target and sights are clear view. I do point shoot, but at the same time I would say I am almost aiming the the shotgun.
I started shooting clays again after probably 30 years. Didn't know i had cross eye dominance. Tried shooting left handed. Have a very hard time with crossing target. Put tape on glasses seems to help a lot. Going to try and see an eye Dr who specializes in shooting.
I actually have a condition where my eyes uncontrollably have a "vibration" that's the best I can describe it. Now if I close one of my eyes this inensifyes so I shoot everything both eyes open except rifles with a scope.
Allen Warren! Nuff said.
It makes me feel like thr barrel isnt aligned when my left eye is open but if i close and open my left eye while aiming i notice the bead is pointing at the same thing both times. So i can use both eyes and just point it now that the shotgun has my confidence.
I'm very right handed and very left eye dominant. I have tried shooting left handed but that is honestly a danger to anyone near me ;) I also have quite a few thousands rounds on my AR, shouldered on my right side making for a lot of muscle memory. I'm going to try shooting with a red dot sight on my shotgun to draw the attention of my eyes over to the right, and see if that is something that can help build the required hand-eye coordination to a level where the red dot might no longer be needed.
4:00 Bro still thinking about that game.
I began shooting with both eyes open and with my messed up eyes it made it impossible to shoot consistently, until my eye doctor told me to shoot with my left eye closed and now i shoot much much better.
I’m left eye dominant but when I’m shooting shotgun or bow my right fights for control. I have to close my right or I’ll be way right on my shot
If i have left dominant eye and right dominant hand, should i shoot on my left side with my left eye open or on the right side with my left eye open
I'm 62 now been shooting left handed for about 55 of them with 1 eye,,,,back in the day a left hand guns were far & few, once you get enough powder burns it's hard to keep that right eye open. Safety glasses were unheard of, I'm not the best shot but manage to get 15 limit of dove in less than a box of shells,,, The pros get paid to do that job i myself do it for fun,, may hit 23 out of 25 clays but I can live with that. What ever works for you then go for it.
Doesn't matter what you do , do what works best for you .
Dave Carrie one of the best game shooters in the UK only has one eye .
Love the shotgunning vids!