carrying arrows

Joined
Aug 21, 2017
Messages
24
Location
Rio Rancho NM
How do you guys carry your arrows when doing spot stalk/ground hunting. Im going to be on a run and gun elk hunt and trying to decide between backpack quiver and bow quiver. Possibly just broadhead sheaths and strapped to pack ? What have you found works and doesn't?
 
Joined
Mar 17, 2018
Messages
369
Location
Texas
I use a bow quiver. Stays on my bow all the time for practice, hunting, everything. Just never take it off. If you go that route just practice with it on there and get used to it before your hunt.


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ScottinPA

WKR
Joined
May 13, 2016
Messages
551
Location
Russell PA
Ditto Squirrel Master.

Like he said, shoot with the bow quiver on all the time since it changes the weight/dynamics.
 

KJH

WKR
Joined
May 10, 2016
Messages
547
I too use a bow quiver but have wondered about another method. The thing I like about the bow quiver is the accessibility of the arrows for a second shot if you need it. I'd like to hear any suggestions for an alternative... Pros and cons?
 
Joined
Aug 26, 2014
Messages
3,158
I've used a hip quiver (Thunderhorn or Selway types) and can attest to them being very nice. They take some getting used to with their position, but follow-up arrows are very available.
 

oldgoat

WKR
Joined
Mar 5, 2015
Messages
2,063
Location
Arvada, CO
I drug my feet getting a bow quiver, always used a hip quiver even when I shot a compound. Finally got one after not being able too quickly get a second arrow because I took my hip quiver off while calling elk and also while treestand hunting because the deer was on the side of the tree that the quiver was hanging on! Now I don't like to shoot without one! They also help quieten the bow if you get the right one! I'm using nothing but Selway's these days!
 
Joined
Aug 26, 2014
Messages
3,158
I automatically default to a bow quiver for 95% of my hunts. The hip quiver is my go-to for certain unique situations. I've strapped a loaded hip quiver to my pack when needed, but obviously not while actively hunting. I've used a hip quiver on a horseback hunt and it worked great. I would never use one for treestand hunting, nor would I likely want it if hiking/hunting longer distances.

Pro for the bow quiver is the obvious immediate access to your arrows. Secondary pro might be the additional mass weight which can be a bit of a stabilizer if you will.

Con for the bow quiver (for me) is the fact that wherever the bow goes...meaning carrying through the brush, swinging into position at the moment of truth, etc....the arrows go with it. That can mean additional noise or arrow wear. My fletch take a bit of abuse on a longer backcountry hunt. Also, many times a bowhunter on the ground is shooting from behind or near some form of cover, be it a rock outcrop, tree, clump of brush or a blind of some sort. Arrows in a bow quiver can easily make unwanted contact with whatever is hiding the hunter, especially when the bow arm is extended to make the shot. In very tight settings, a bow quiver can be an outright liability.
 

GLB

WKR
Joined
Nov 3, 2013
Messages
712
Location
Alaska
For most of my longbows I use the Raptor side quiver. I can carry six broadhead arrows and a couple of blunt type in it. It works well with a day pack and easy to weave through brush as it's tucked under my arm. I have one longbow that I use a Great Northern bow quiver and like that as well. On a extended hunt I carry extra arrows in a tube stuffed in my pack.
 
Joined
Aug 14, 2016
Messages
1,451
Location
Great Falls MT
I run a Hill style bow and can't make myself put a bow quiver on it. So I run a mini cat Quiver on the side of my Kifaru. It works pretty good. Not as fast as a traditional back quiver but it let's me have my pack on. Then if I need to I can drop my pack and take the quiver off and I leave the quiver strap on so I can just put it on and go.

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Joined
Dec 23, 2012
Messages
21
Bow quiver all the way! I tried a back quiver and a side quiver, I couldn’t seem to get them to stop rattling around. Broadheads sheaths are dangerous. If heard a lot of stories about folks getting impaled after falling.
With a bow quiver there is minimal movement to get the arrow out. If you stumble or fall (who hasn’t when elk hunting) you aren’t going to impale yourself because the arrows aren’t attached to you, they are attached to the bow. which you can keep away from you on the way down.


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MadDawg

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 18, 2017
Messages
198
Location
Arkansas
I have two bow mounted selway custom quivers and love them! I can't stand a hip quiver, but I do live in Arkansas and it hangs on brush like every other step lol.
 
Joined
Sep 18, 2016
Messages
688
Location
Maryland
I had a side stalker years ago, cool looking but hangs up on things or you are constantly pushing it, tucking it or pulling it around. Had a CAT quiver, that was nice but it was part of a pack system that sucked. Put a Selway on my long bow and have a Great Northern on my Titan III now, won't change again from a bow quiver. I can take a judo arrow off and slide on a broadhead arrow without too much movement, have done it several times hunting deer and not gotten busted. And if I have my bow I have my arrows can't take one without the other.
 

Marmots

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Sep 15, 2018
Messages
298
Location
Idaho
For hunting, I use a bow quiver. Specifically a Three Rivers mini boa bow quiver. I have no complaints about it. I don't really notice the extra volume or weight on my bow, and it holds four arrows with either judo points or broadheads. I can take it on and off the bow in under a minute and it has fit every recurve I've ever tried it on.

I'm pretty tall and lanky and pretty certain that no one has ever described me as graceful. I personally find a bow quiver to be the best solution in brush. I'm already threading my bow through obstacles when stalking through dense cover, and with a small bow quiver I can pass my arrows through at the same time, with my eyes on the fletchings to make sure they're protected..

I used to hunt with a back quiver and found it to be a constant hassle My arrows were always getting stuck on branches above my head or spilling out when I bent over. The back quiver interfered with me carrying a pack. It is also a lot slower to draw and knock an arrow located on my back than it is to draw and knock an arrow located on my bow.

I still like a back quiver for 3d shoots where I all I need is to carry an abundance of field points down a path.
 

Kbetts

FNG
Joined
Sep 14, 2016
Messages
21
Location
Delaware?
Light weight EFA three or four arrow on the bow. For extras I carry a Palmer Bowmaster Elite mostly because I can pack arrows in it when flying. A Safari Tuff is lighter but not as protective.
 
Joined
May 17, 2017
Messages
65
Location
IA
A Safari Tuff quiver is great hunting quiver especially if you run into bad weather. Protects fletching and you can quickly get another arrow out of for a follow up shot.

I primarily use a Thunderhorn Small Fry now. Ease of use, quiets bow, and lessens hand shock.



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Joined
Sep 1, 2018
Messages
49
Location
Springtown TX
I like bow quivers. I was installing inserts in bows I built. Or if it was a nice custom I would use Selway. I always used side or back quivers, but one time in SD I stalked a mule deer and left everything behind but my bow and 1 arrow for stealth. Of course I whiffed the shot, but the buck just stood there, and I was the dummy with a bow and no arrows. I switched to bow quivers after that haha.
 

balls47

FNG
Joined
Aug 29, 2018
Messages
25
Location
Colorado
Recommend a bow quiver, I've tried most other ways and a bow mounted quiver works best for me. I use a Selway bolt on for my takedown bows and a wrap type on one piece bows.
 
Joined
May 13, 2014
Messages
354
I've been bow hunting for a long time and over the years I've tried a lot of different quiver styles. Used to use bow mounted quivers only, then after about 10 years I tried a hip quiver and really liked that style, used it for 20+ years. About 5 years ago I started strapping my hip quiver to my pack and have been running with that style for compound bow hunting ever since. You have to strap it on in a way where you can remove an arrow from the quiver while still wearing the pack so on mine it kind of just hangs loosely on the pack, low, on my right side. When longbow or recurve hunting I use a bow mounted quiver as those bows are so light, a little extra weight adds to the stability when shooting them.
 
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