Leftys & Rightys

CZU

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I was so excited when my mom found left handed scissors for me when I was in Elementary school in the 60's. Everything back then was for a right-handed world and that is how I learned to shoot long guns. It was pretty awkward trying to shoot a bolt action .22 designed for a right handed person on the left shoulder. All I had access to was the .22, a Sweet 16 and a Win M94. One could argue that the M94 was appropriate for a lefty but why bother. So if it's a long gun it goes on the right, handguns to the left.

I stopped at the LGS the other day on the way home and one of the guys said to me "check this out" as he pushed a revolver in my hand. What's this I say as I'm looking at it and he says a left hand revolver. No way and as I'm looking I see that it is a left hand revolver. Never heard of such a thing but sure enough a Charter Arms lefty revolver with Southpaw boldly stamped on the barrel. After looking at and shooting revolvers for years this thing looked funny to me. Of course I couldn't leave it behind so now I am the owner of a lefty revolver.

Pictured below is a CA Pathfinder & a CA Southpaw

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My career started in 1968 when it was a right handed world so I’d have trouble w/any leftie handgun today. I don’t even swap the mag release button on my M&P 2.0 Compact due to long term muscle memory.
 
I'm a lefty and shoot all handguns left-handed. Since reloading a revolver is a two-handed operation anyway, I've never been tempted to buy a lefty revolver. Switching the gun over to the right hand and grabbing the speed loader with my left doesn't add that much time to the process. I've been doing it that way for so long that I think I might be slower with a lefty gun.
 
Just a heads up we had misfire problems with her revolver. I'd bought it used from GB and suspect the previous owner may have also had problems due to the little usage the revolver showed.

We would randomly have a failure to fire, light primer strikes, with no rhyme or reason. We were using factory ammo, it was not one chamber that would cause the problem, and the problem was not consistently happening. By random I mean maybe once every 20-25 shots.

After making everything was clean and not finding an obvious problem I contacted Charter Arms. Charter said that even though I'd bought it used I could send it in and they would correct the problem. This was just at the beginning of the COVID fiasco and I told them I was nervous about mailing it to them so they offered to send me a new mainspring and slightly longer firing pin. I installed both and the problem seems to be resolved.

My daughter decided that she wanted a house gun rather than a CCW pistol so she left me the Charter Arms and took an old 10-5. I'm ambidextrous so her little CA gets a fair amount of range and carry time.
 
I am one of those odd southpaws. I have learned to adapt to living in a right handed world. I almost find it easier to hit the magazine release with my middle left finger.

At this point, I think it would be too odd for me to go left.
 
Just installed a Metal Mag release in my Glock 43x.
Put it in for a Lefty -me.
First one I ever used one on an Auto.
It’s feels weird!
 
I went to a Catholic grade school, and the Nuns kept trying to get me to write with my right hand. Mom found that out and went to the school and told them in no uncertain terms to not make me use my right hand for writing. They never did anymore, so I stayed left handed.
 
As a lefty I refuse to comply, so long guns are break open shotguns and ambi friendly rifles.

Handguns are lefty friendly M&P semis and gen4 Glock


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I have a Savage .223 in left hand. It is accurate and I really like it.

Which model Savage 223 do you have? I have a left handed 110 in 270 but am looking for a 223. I've thought about the Axis but not sure about the synthetic stock.
 
I went to a Catholic grade school, and the Nuns kept trying to get me to write with my right hand. Mom found that out and went to the school and told them in no uncertain terms to not make me use my right hand for writing. They never did anymore, so I stayed left handed.

I had the exact same experience. And, my parents handled it the exact same way!

The OP mentioned the left hand scissors his mom found. My mom found a pair for me, too. Probably the same ones: safety scissors with a rounded tip and the word "Lefty" emblazened onto the side.
I used to carry mine to school in my pencil case. Everyone else just used the school-owned scissors kept in a big rack in the classroom.
Sure enough, the first time I used mine, at the end of class, the teacher took them from me. She said they were the school's.
Being 7 years old, I couldn't manage to convince her that the school didn't have any left handed scissors and that's why my mom bought me my own pair.
When I got home and my mom gave me the usual "How was school today?" greeting. I told her what happened.
Result: another parent-teacher meeting. I got my scissors back.
The lesson I learned from these experiences, and confirmed over the years, is that school was, to a large degree, just a big conformity factory.

Couple years later, I joined a smallbore junior rifle program. We used regular right hand Remington .22s. I simply shot left handed and reached over for the bolt. I didn't care! I was happy to be shooting!
Anschutz accomodates left handed smallbore competitors with two options: 1) a true mirror image left hand target rifle, or 2), a left hand stock cut to hold a right hand action.
Apparently, there are many lefties who got started the same way I did and just got used to working the right hand bolt!

And, don't get me started on guitar stories.....
 
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I went to a Catholic grade school, and the Nuns kept trying to get me to write with my right hand. Mom found that out and went to the school and told them in no uncertain terms to not make me use my right hand for writing. They never did anymore, so I stayed left handed.

I had the same experience in 2nd grade. If fact, I wasn't allowed to go to recess for almost a full semester. I didn't tell my parents because I thought I was doing something wrong. When my mom (also a lefty) found out, things got ugly...and I got to go to recess with the rest of the kids.
 
I was so excited when my mom found left handed scissors for me when I was in Elementary school in the 60's. Everything back then was for a right-handed world and that is how I learned to shoot long guns. It was pretty awkward trying to shoot a bolt action .22 designed for a right handed person on the left shoulder. All I had access to was the .22, a Sweet 16 and a Win M94. One could argue that the M94 was appropriate for a lefty but why bother. So if it's a long gun it goes on the right, handguns to the left.

I stopped at the LGS the other day on the way home and one of the guys said to me "check this out" as he pushed a revolver in my hand. What's this I say as I'm looking at it and he says a left hand revolver. No way and as I'm looking I see that it is a left hand revolver. Never heard of such a thing but sure enough a Charter Arms lefty revolver with Southpaw boldly stamped on the barrel. After looking at and shooting revolvers for years this thing looked funny to me. Of course I couldn't leave it behind so now I am the owner of a lefty revolver.

Pictured below is a CA Pathfinder & a CA Southpaw

ECnVGFf.png

swKNs2E.png

k58Zwh6.png

They're great. I carried a CA Off Duty .38 for years. I actually became a fairly decent shot with it. When I found a used Southpaw on GB, I had to snag it. Now the wife and I can both have a CA snubby.

I had bought a Galati Gear double pistol case that I never used. It has 10 outside mag pockets. I found that I could put 2 loaded speedloaders in each of those pockets (20 total) and never have to carry extra ammo when I go out shooting.
 
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Died in the wool southpaw. Right eye dominate. Taught myself to shoot long guns from the rigt shoulder so it can be done! Can't shoot from the left shoulder any more. Handguns are pretty much an amphibous proposition. Either hand works. ;)
 
I have always been thankful God made me right-handed and right hand dominant.
Some things I am ambidextrous on like using a shovel or chopping ax.
 
I have always been thankful God made me right-handed and right eye dominant.
Some things I am ambidextrous on like using a shovel or chopping ax.
 
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