Hey! You know what crazy is that when you watch a majority of the 3rd world tribal documentaries you see them holding arrows in the fixed bow hand, and when they loose an arrow they simply nock another one from the hand. I made a crude willow basket quiver one time for rabbit hunting but it rattled too much so I made one from some buckskin I had left over. My arrows and quiver are in a movie called Tribe by Adam Besheer. Google it! It's pretty cool. It's on Viveo I think. I'm in the credits. Great video bud again! Take care
i like carrying a quiver if im small game hunting, or bow fishing. not every shot is a hit and you loose some arrows. so you need a few. however deer hunting maybe 4 arrows max. no quiver needed.not really going to get a lot of shots.pretty much can hold them in my bow hand along with the bow.i use a modified type plains quiver because i like the versatility of it. it can be a back quiver or a sort of side quiver or underarm quiver.very similar to yours there except a semi-rawhide quiver. its not solid stiff but its not soft and arrows wont push through. i also have a special quiver made from shoots kind of basket style but with a sling set up like a plains quiver.i dont use a bow case. not planning on living out there.lol but if i did, then ya it be a must to keep a bow from getting soaked.i like your videos. lots of great info keep it up.
Seems the question should be viewed from multiple angles. I have heard there was a standard amount of 9, in tribes that were in hostile areas, were hostile themselves, and possibly stories of cannibalism in the mix. (Number may be of a party member not a lone hunter.) The point may be confidence. Unless the point of the question isn't about game. Do I have arrows because I am hunted, because of what I am hunting, both, and is it a defence/offence requirement against multiple targets.