BLAZE Magazine Fall/Winter 2015 | Page 40

Outdoors & Education TIPS & TACTICS Eye Dominance By Joella Bates “are you right handed or left handed?” the man behind the pawn shop counter asked the young lady as he pulled the bow off the hook. Fig. 1 “Sweetie, let me help you before you make a big mistake,” the older man chimed in. “i’ve been shooting for a long time and you are about to fall into the same trap that many a person topples into in the beginning. i did too, but now that i know better. i help others when i can. let’s have a cup of coffee and i’ll give you my ten cents worth. i’ll even buy you the coffee.” Fortunately, an experienced archer overheard the conversation and was brave enough to stop the young lady from spending her hard earned money on a bow that would not really serve her well. let’s see what advice the young lady got over coffee that day. People make the grave error of believing that because they use one hand to write with and do many other skills, they need to shoot that way too. Handedness is not what determines which bow you need. You will shoot consistently better when you use a bow that matches your dominant eye. that means that you draw the bow string and anchor under the dominant eye. webbing between the thumbs and first fingers. now, while keeping both eyes open, look through the hole at an object on the wall or in the case of my class, i have them look at my nose (see Fig. 2). as the instructor, i can see one of their eyes behind the hole. that eye is their dominant eye. For the student, have them close one eye while continuing to look at the object. if the object remains there are many advantages for you when in the hole, they are looking with the you shoot a bow, or a gun for that matter, dominant eye, if the object moves, then using the dominant eye. But first, how do the other eye is the dominant eye. you determine your dominant eye? as an instructor, i have my students form a small triangle with their two hands