![]() To the quiver, they're all just big sticks anyway.Īt the moment I'm using the middle compartment as a very low capacity bag of holding it holds things like a coil of rope, a change of clothes and my bowmaking tools. If I wanted to store wands in the arrow compartment, magic rods in the second and magic staves in the third, I could do so. Why should the Quiver of Elhonna be any different? We've already suggested that the second and third compartments, being deeper, may not be as suitable for arrows as for larger items, but they are just empty space. There are no artificial restrictions that say, "regardless of the item's total capacity, no more than arrows may be stored within." And why would there be? I can't imagine any in-game reasoning for doing so. The number of arrows that might be stored in a bag of holding, a handy haversack or a portable hole (take precautions against puncturing any of these, of course) is limited only by the total capacity of the bag/sack/hole. My character has a Quiver of Elhonna, but never uses anything like javelins or sport spears, and has been known to run out of arrows once or twice (not hard when you are firing off three per round in almost every combat.) I'll still keep the large compartment for storing bows and quarterstaves, but that middle compartment can be converted for arrows. Having suggested that, I'm going to go try it myself. In either case, you might conceivably get around the problem by using some kind of lightweight object to fill up the lower part of the second and third compartments perhaps hollow wooden frames that just take up space and leave just enough room at the top of the bow and javelin compartments for arrows. You might only have to reach in as far as your elbow to retrieve arrows from the middle compartment. Unlike the "handy haversack", items don't conveniently float to the top of the quiver, so what you'd probably find is that if you stored arrows in the "bow" compartment, they'd fall to the bottom of the extradimensional space in that section of the quiver, and you'd have to reach WAAAY down - say, halfway down a six-foot deep compartment, meaning you'd be in it up to your shoulder - in order to reach the arrows. My assumption is that this would work, but not well.
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