Over the past year or so, I have been having increasing eye strain issues when looking through any and all of my scopes. I have always experienced it after extended time behind the scope. My eyes would go buggy and I couldn't focus - usually after maybe 30 minutes. Recently, however, it's been happening after maybe 15-20 shots. I have glasses, but don't "need" them, and rarely wear them (usually only for driving at night).
My first thought was that my eyes are changing as I age (as everyone's do) and I needed to readjust my ocular lenses on my scopes. I tried and it had no effect. I started researching all sorts of things from the effects of shooting corrected, messing more with the ocular, even if something like Lasik would be an option.
A couple weeks ago, on a trip to my local range, for some reason I decided to wear my driving glasses on the way down. Low and behold, when I got to the range, I did not get eye strain at all during my two-hour stint at the range. My thought was that wearing the glasses lowered the strain on my eyes while driving, where you frequently have to look farther away (and I would strain my eyes to do so). By lowering the strain ahead of looking through the scope, it made the muscles in my eyes less susceptible to strain while doing so.
To test this theory, I tried it again. Last weekend, a friend and I drove two and half hours down to BLM land up in the hills and I wore my glasses the whole way. We spent about 6 hours shooting. At the end, we were "dueling" against a reactive target at 950 yards where were both continuously looking through our scopes for extended times. The whole day I didn't experience eye strain at all.
The question for people who have experienced the same (or any eye docs in the house), does my theory about wearing glasses (and reducing eyes strain) before shooting having a bearing while shooting hold water?
My first thought was that my eyes are changing as I age (as everyone's do) and I needed to readjust my ocular lenses on my scopes. I tried and it had no effect. I started researching all sorts of things from the effects of shooting corrected, messing more with the ocular, even if something like Lasik would be an option.
A couple weeks ago, on a trip to my local range, for some reason I decided to wear my driving glasses on the way down. Low and behold, when I got to the range, I did not get eye strain at all during my two-hour stint at the range. My thought was that wearing the glasses lowered the strain on my eyes while driving, where you frequently have to look farther away (and I would strain my eyes to do so). By lowering the strain ahead of looking through the scope, it made the muscles in my eyes less susceptible to strain while doing so.
To test this theory, I tried it again. Last weekend, a friend and I drove two and half hours down to BLM land up in the hills and I wore my glasses the whole way. We spent about 6 hours shooting. At the end, we were "dueling" against a reactive target at 950 yards where were both continuously looking through our scopes for extended times. The whole day I didn't experience eye strain at all.
The question for people who have experienced the same (or any eye docs in the house), does my theory about wearing glasses (and reducing eyes strain) before shooting having a bearing while shooting hold water?