Right Handed, Left Eye Dominant Child

Once your kid can hold a rifle in his shoulder one handed I I think a right handed rifle shot left handed has advantages.
This is true as can be. I have a left handed, left eye dominant acquaintance who can shoot a right handed bolt gun faster than any righty I have ever seen.
 
I’ve got a 10 year old that’s right handed and left eye dominant. I’ve known that for as long as I can remember so couldn’t say when we noticed.
Initially he shot right handed and screwed his head around so he could aim with his left eye. This goes back to when he was about 3 or 4 years old starting with a 410 and .22. I have a pic of him shooting at 7 years old and he was still shooting that way. By 8 he was shooting left handed and it was easier for him. He continues to shoot a rifle left and I’ll probably end up buying him a left handed rifle one of these days.
When we bought him a compound he wanted to stay left but expressed some concern over the mechanics of drawing and shooting left. They were never a problem, he started low and built weight. He shoots 35lbs now and draws as smoothly with his left as anyone could.

Thats a sample of 1 but for my kid it wasn’t hard to choose. For the most part he knew what he wanted after he tried both ways.
 
I'm RH, but LED. So is my oldest daughter

I've owned and tried shooting RH rifles for years; they're fine off a bench or with a rest, but if you ever hunt with rifle in hand, such as still hunt or track in the snow, follow up shots are slow. Get LH equipment for your son and set him up for success.
 
My youngest (16) is right hand left eye. Learned that when he was 5 and tried leaning over extra to look through 22 scope with left eye.

He shot everything lh from then on. Would never know he's a righty watching him shoot. Good with bow, shotgun and rifle. Awesome thing about kids they pick things up fast.
 
Left Eye dominant and right handed here. It was pretty obvious I was going to be going hunting with Dad from a young age. He "trained" me to shoot with my right eye, knowing that it'd make finding firearms to hunt with easier. (Thanks Dad!) I remember first starting out using an eye patch over my left eye when shooting. In time, I didn't need the patch. I just naturally closed my left eye. Now, I shoot just about everything with both eyes open. All of my rifles (and shotguns) are right handed.
 
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