I was shooting a couple years back in my backyard and got tired of the hip quiver. My three PVC catfishing rodholders were on the river bank nearby so I grabbed them and drove their pointy ends in at 30, 40, 50 yds. I dropped my arrows into the PVC and shot while taking arrows out of my "quiver stand".
After shooting a group I was setting my bow down when it dawned on me I could also set my bow's stabilizer in it to keep it up off the grass.
Just thought I'd share if any of you would benefit from this cheap and convenient "system". Sure it keeps you too glued to fixed yardage but at times you are tuning, conditioning and improving form - so no big deal for me most of the time.
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it may not be clear in the pic but I simply did a long sweeping bias cut across the PVC to make very pointy tube ends. Used the heavier scheduled PVC so they're very strong.
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by the way - move the target back 5 yds and you have an instant "split the pins" range
don't be a major dork and move all three quivers back like I did the first time... ha ha ha ;:;banghead
After shooting a group I was setting my bow down when it dawned on me I could also set my bow's stabilizer in it to keep it up off the grass.
Just thought I'd share if any of you would benefit from this cheap and convenient "system". Sure it keeps you too glued to fixed yardage but at times you are tuning, conditioning and improving form - so no big deal for me most of the time.
- - - Updated - - -
it may not be clear in the pic but I simply did a long sweeping bias cut across the PVC to make very pointy tube ends. Used the heavier scheduled PVC so they're very strong.
- - - Updated - - -
by the way - move the target back 5 yds and you have an instant "split the pins" range
don't be a major dork and move all three quivers back like I did the first time... ha ha ha ;:;banghead
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