I remember when Fred started selling the GFA commercially. He had a table at the Kalamazoo Expo. One of the things I like about Fred is that he is humble. Fred looked like a giant behind a tiny table. I remember him grinning kinda sheepishly. Our conversation was something like this:
Fred: Hey Roger, hows it going?
Me: What the heck are you doing?
Fred: I've been making these quivers for myself for a long time, what do you think?
Me: Sure, I'll try one
I have been using that same quiver Fred handed me since that day. Everywhere. Michigan, Wyoming, Idaho, Canada...everytime. I tried a bow quiver on my Widow for about a week. Nope. Back to my original GFA.
Durable? Yep. I hunt a ton. We are 18 days into our season here and I have hunted 9 times. I am NOT one of those guys who baby's his gear. It has been flung out of treestands, slammed in truck doors, bounced around in the bed of my truck. Brute strong.
Quiet? Absolutely. I'm a noise freak. I recently took apart a tree stand and climbing sticks and applied adhesive microfiber to the entire thing for silence. Nearly every piece of gear I actually use is modified some way with noise in mind. Modifications to my GFA? ZERO.
Functional? I have used it while staking/stillhunting, ground hunting, treestand hunting, hunting from a canoe.....yes, it adapts.
In my humble opinion, the GFA quiver is the best available. 20 years from now we will be buying them up to USE, not because they are some kinda collectors item (which they probably will be).