If you hold the bow with your left hand and draw the string with your right hand, you are in fact RIGHT HANDED, tilt the bow very slightly clockwise.
If you hold the bow with your right hand and draw the srting with your left, you are indeed left-handed, tilt the bow very slightly anticlockwise.
And remember, DO NOT hold the bow sideways, it is an extremely common mistake you see on the television and NO real archer would do it because it ruins your bow-arm technique and draw technique.
You do not tilt or "cant" the bow at all if it is a compound bow. You want to bow perfectly in line with the body. If it is a traditional long bow or recurve bow then you cant "tilt" slightly toward the riser which in your case would be to the left.
A bow for a right hand person, which is the hand he or she would draw with, has the arrow shelf on the left side of the bow. Just the opposite if it is a left-hand bow for a left hand person.A RH person holds the bow in their left hand, a LH person holds the bow in their right hand.
Towards the arm holding the bow. So left if you are puling the bow back with your right hand. Right if you are pulling the bow back with your left hand.
Modern archery bows are usually designated as being either left or right handed. If you draw the string with your right hand, and the arrow lies on the left side of the bow, the bow is right handed, if you draw with the left hand, arrow on the right side of the bow, it is left handed. Some basic, traditional, bows, such as the English longbow, can be shot either left or right handed, modern recurved bows cannot be shot from the "wrong" hand due to the position of the arrow rest, and the cutout in the side of the bow. Normally, if you are right-handed, you need a right-handed bow, since you will usually draw with your right hand, left-handed people use their left hand.
When you stand on the ship and face the bow, the right-hand side is "starboard". The left-hand side is "port".
The arrow rest for a recurve bow should be on the left side to you while you are holding the grip of a right handed bow (pulling the string with your right hand while holding your bow with your left).
On any ship, the left side is Port, and the right side is Starboard.
Right handed bow: hold in your left hand, draw with your right hand and use your right eye dominant. Left handed bow: hold in your right hand, draw with your left hand and use your left eye dominant.
no, there is no way to do this the arrow rest is on opposite sides of the bow
If you have a left handed bow, then you probobly would be left handed anyway, so you would pull the string back with your right hand.
Port, is nautical terms, means left, so when facing the bow, the port side would be the left side of the boat.
Left side - is the port side of a ship. An easy way to remember is that if you stand facing the bow (front end) of the ship your left hand side is the port side, your right the starboard. Left is a shorter word than right, port is shorter word than starboard.