
Swear that you're going to employ that arrow in its owner's name, or that you're merely holding it and they can reclaim it whenever they find it convenient to receive it from you. Hell, you don't even need to have friends to make this work every arrow you obtain, swear to somebody else.
#PATHFINDER ARROWS IN A QUIVER FREE#
Feel free to carry around up to a thousand of somebody else's arrows. I asked my GM if you could put some kind of separator in one of the quivers, so that I could carry those 8 iron. Here's the situation: I can carry 2 quivers, for a total of 40 arrows, 20 each. He cannot borrow or carry wealth or items worth more than 50 gp that belong to others.Įxceptio probat regulam. Hello Reddit, I'm playing as a zen archer, last session we hit lv3 and I think we might need some 'iron cold damage', so i bought some iron cold arrows. Maybe even just shoot at animals and eat them. So, if you just get in the practice of trading them for a sandwich every now and then, you can use them in the meantime to shoot people. If you put ranks in Craft: Fletching, it's not even wierd that making arrows would be your principal means of earning sustainance (and since you're a badass who would otherwise stand to earn a lot more money by simply accepting your due on the Wealth-By-Level table, making arrows for your daily bread is the very definition of humility).

The monk can never keep more money or wealth on his person than he needs to feed bathe, and shelter himself for 1 week in modest accommodations.Īnd while we're on that subject, "Wealth" is equatable to "anything of commodified value." Through barter, arrows can be your means of exchange. The point is, arrows are categorically more similar to the upkeep described in the next clause: That which is ephemeral, then, is only truely owned when it has already been given up! Meditate on this koan, and write it down in your analects, or, whatever. For your consideration: The act of possession is the act of using, but with an arrow, the act of using is the act of de-posessing. This is based on the number of quivers carried and how many arrows each quiver held. An archer would be expected to carry up to 50 arrows, with some sources saying that an archer could carry up to 100 arrows. To answer your implicit question, it being, "How can my poverty-sworn monk employ a bow with arrows?"-Ī clutch of arrows is expendable, much as a bowl of rice. Septemby James Tolbert A single quiver holds up to 25-30 arrows. In this way, a quiver of arrows is, too, a single possession. A sash, tunic, two sandles, chestbindings, and holy underwear are all only only two possessions, even though those posessions are comprised of six objects in total. Look no further than the list of possessions enumerated in the vow, itself: the monk is permitted a set of clothes and a pair of shoes. Vow of Poverty accepts that an array of several discreet objects can be one possession.
