Now is the season when UK archers like nothing better then to go out into the fields and hunt down hay bales - atleast thats what I have done since starting this bow crase of mine. But this year I joined a field archery club, which means I still fulfill my lust for bale killing but in a woodland area giving me the added joy of shooting from all sorts of weird positions.
And just for the occasion I decided to make yet another quiver, or in this case convert an old shoulder one to a hip and create a snassy little buffalo horn clip so that I could attach my bow to it, strung and unstrung leaving my hands free to help alaberate on all those important archers yarns of adventure and mishap.
The clip in question can be seen near the top of the quiver and was drilled and sawn out of the horn in an elongated U shape with the gap being about the same width as the bow. This bow is made from fibreglas and the leather the limbs are covered with allows for a tight fit that does not harm the bow - tight enough to hold, but also loose enough to withdraw easily.
And just for the occasion I decided to make yet another quiver, or in this case convert an old shoulder one to a hip and create a snassy little buffalo horn clip so that I could attach my bow to it, strung and unstrung leaving my hands free to help alaberate on all those important archers yarns of adventure and mishap.
The clip in question can be seen near the top of the quiver and was drilled and sawn out of the horn in an elongated U shape with the gap being about the same width as the bow. This bow is made from fibreglas and the leather the limbs are covered with allows for a tight fit that does not harm the bow - tight enough to hold, but also loose enough to withdraw easily.