Most
right-handed people are right-eye dominant and most left-handed people are
left-eye dominant. But this certainly isn't true for everyone. For some
people, hand and eye dominance are opposite - which creates a dilemma for
participating in the shooting sports.
If you hold your hand out at arm's length and make a circle, then view an object
across the room by looking through that circle, your brain must choose which eye
will actually focus on the object. Since your eyes are roughly 3" apart, both
eyes cannot maintain the direct line-of-sight to the object. So one eye must
take over, and you'll naturally position your hand more to the right if you're
right-eye dominant, or slightly to the left if you're left-eye-dominant. In
either case, the eye that takes over and maintains the sight-line is the
dominant eye.


There is
another easy test for this. While looking through your circle, close one of
your eyes. If your hand appears to "shift" suddenly to the side, the eye you
have closed is your dominant eye. If you close one eye and nothing really seems
to happen, then you have closed your non-dominant (recessive) eye. Of course,
you can see the object with either eye, providing you just use one eye at a
time. But if both eyes are open, your dominant eye will always take-over and
demand the sight-line through the circle.
So what does all this have to do with shooting a bow? In some cases, nothing.
If you plan to shoot your bow by closing one eye and sighting with the other, it
doesn't really matter whether your hand and eye dominance match or not.
However, most serious archers sight and shoot their bows with BOTH EYES OPEN.
Shooting with both eyes open gives you a much brighter and more natural
field-of-view, even when looking through a peep sight. The dominant eye focuses
crisply and does the actual "sighting" through the restricted area of the peep
sight, and the other eye "fills in the gaps" in the picture (though not in
complete binocular focus).
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Field-of-View: One
Eye Open
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Field-of-View: Both
Eyes Open
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If you learn
to shoot with both eyes open, you'll also notice another benefit. It's very
easy to follow the flight of your arrow all the way to the target when
shooting with both eyes open. But when you shoot with one eye closed,
you'll often "lose" the arrow in flight because the peep sight jerks upwards
at the shot, temporarily obscuring your line-of-sight. So shooting with
both eyes open certainly has it's perks.
But there is a catch. If you plan to shoot your bow with BOTH EYES OPEN,
you must choose a bow that matches your eye-dominance, rather than your
hand-dominance. Again, this is because the dominant eye will always
command the sight line when both eyes are open. We'll explain.
When you sight a bow, you basically have to manipulate your view to get all
sighting elements in a straight line: beginning with your eye, then the
peep, then the sight pin, then the target. So your dominant eye needs to be
directly behind the string to line everything up. When the bow's sights are
adjusted properly, your visual sight line should mimic the flight path of
the arrow (not considering the arrow's parabolic arc). But with regards to
the left and right aiming of the bow, the line-of-sight and path of the
arrow should be the same.
When the bow
is sighted with the dominant eye, everything works as it should. The
line-of-sight and the path of the arrow are similar, and the arrow hits the
target.
But if a
shooter tries to sight the bow with the recessive eye while keeping both
eyes open, the dominant eye takes over (even though it's not looking through
the peep sight). The dominant eye commands the sight line automatically.
This puts the first point of your line-of-sight, your eye, roughly 3 inches
off to one side. To compensate, the shooter turns the bow dramatically
towards the dominant eye. Unfortunately, when this happens, the sight-line
and the arrow's path are no longer the same. The arrow misses dramatically
left or right and "sighting-in" becomes all but impossible.

Truth is,
right-hand bows are meant to be sighted with the right eye. Left-hand bows
are meant to be sighted with the left-eye. And trying to force the issue
otherwise is often a frustrating and futile act. Over the years, we've even
witnessed a few shooters with eye-dominance conflicts try to lean over far
enough to see through the peep sight with the outside eye. Of course, this
creates an entire host of new ergonomic and shooting form problems, and it's
a solution we strongly discourage.
For
those with eye-dominance conflicts, the issue of right vs. left ultimately
boils down to choice. If you are right-handed, you're of course a little
stronger and more coordinated with your right arm. So naturally, you would
want to shoot a right-handed bow. But, if you happen to be also be left-eye
dominant, you have to make a choice.
You must either shoot a
right-handed bow - and learn to sight the bow with one-eye squinted closed,
OR you must
adapt to shoot a left-handed bow so you can keep both eyes open and sight
with your dominant eye.
It's a difficult choice, and there is no right or wrong answer. However, we
do make the following general recommendations.
1. If you are a new shooter, by all means, buy a bow that matches your
eye-dominance so you can learn to shoot with both eyes open. If you have no
old habits to unlearn, you'll probably adapt quickly to the off-handed bow
and never know it was supposed to be awkward.
2. But if you are a long-time shooter (archery, rifle, pistol, etc.), and
you're already accustom to closing your dominant eye when you shoot, you may
find changing to an off-handed bow to be particularly awkward and
frustrating. In this case we recommend you not make the change and stick
with your current technique (aka...dance with the one that brung 'ya).
Again, there isn't a right or wrong decision here. Success in the shooting
sports is often a matter of subtleties in form and technique, and everyone
is different. Whichever method you feel will benefit you most, and that
will ultimately allow you to shoot most comfortably and accurately....that's
the right choice for you.