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Backyard Marksman Compact Pistol Crossbow - Black Aluminum

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22.99


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Backyard Varmint Pistol Crossbow - Black Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9467/image_1920?unique=d23d43e

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Sun’s sliding down behind the mesquites and something’s tearing up the garden again. This 50 lb pistol crossbow lives by the back door, light in the hand with a smooth cocking lever and bright, easy-to-find bolts. At around 200 feet per second and true out to about 60 feet, it’s built for Texas-sized backyards, small-game hunts, and evening target sessions when the wind finally settles and the chores are done.

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When the Back Fence Starts Moving

Out past the patio light, you hear it—something rooting under the fence line. Too big for a mouse, too bold to care you’re home. You don’t always want to reach for a rifle just to clear a rabbit from the garden or a rat from the feed shed. That’s where a compact 50 lb pistol crossbow earns its spot by the back door, right next to the boots you only wear in stickers and sandburs.

This Backyard Varmint pistol crossbow is built for that in-between space Texans know well: close, clear shots in a yard that’s bigger than most people’s whole property, but still too tight for high-powered noise and over-penetration.

Control and Quiet in Real Texas Yard Work

Walk out into a Hill Country backyard or a Panhandle windbreak, and sound carries. A loud crack can bring every neighbor’s dog alive and wake kids you just got to sleep. This 50 lb draw pistol crossbow keeps it quiet. You cock it with a solid rear lever that doesn’t fight you, seat one of the high-visibility plastic bolts on the orange rail, and you’re ready to handle business without waking the whole road.

With a bolt pushing around 200 feet per second and staying accurate to roughly 60 feet, it fits the real distances you face around a Texas property—across a driveway, from porch to garden, shed to fence post. It’s quick to shoulder from a low ready position, and the pistol grip feels natural whether you’re standing on bare dirt or concrete slab.

Dialing In Your Shot When the Wind Won’t Settle

Texas wind doesn’t ask permission. It cuts across a North Texas pasture and whips down a South Texas alley the same way. This pistol crossbow comes with adjustable sights for both elevation and wind compensation, so you’re not just guessing where that bolt will drift.

Once you sight it in for the usual shot from your porch to the far fence, muscle memory takes over. The matte black limbs flex, the string snaps forward, and that colored bolt tracks a line you’ve learned like the cracks in your driveway. The manual safety gives you a clear, mechanical confirmation before each shot, which matters when kids and dogs wander in and out of your line of fire.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and Crossbow Curiosity

Folks who come looking for an OTF knife in Texas usually care about the same things this pistol crossbow offers: fast deployment, compact size, and real-world utility around their place. Where an OTF knife Texas buyer wants a blade that opens quick in a truck cab or on a gate, this crossbow is the same idea at range—small, stowable, and always ready for that one job you didn’t see coming.

The same hand that rides a Texas OTF knife in the pocket often keeps a light crossbow hanging in the garage or barn. Both tools live in that space between daily chores and emergency use: cutting baling twine, clearing a possum out of the rafters, or knocking cans off a fence after supper when the air finally cools.

Texas OTF Knife Culture, Meet the Backyard Crossbow

Ask someone who carries a Texas OTF knife why they chose that mechanism, and they’ll usually say the same thing: it’s quick, it’s compact, and it does what they ask without complaint. This pistol crossbow fits that mindset. It’s not a big deer rig. It’s not a fancy archery setup. It’s a compact, lever-cocking tool with a 50 pound draw and a job description: small game, pests, and tight-range targets.

The durable fiber or alloy construction with its aluminum frame shrugs off truck dust, mud from a low-water crossing, or the grit that blows in under a roll-up door. It’s the kind of thing you hang by a nail or slide behind the seat and don’t baby. The black frame and limbs blend in, while the orange rail and colored plastic bolts stand out just enough that you can find them at dusk in Johnson grass or caliche dust.

Legal Reality: Where This Fits Beside Your Texas Blades

Texans who keep an eye on switchblade and OTF knife laws already know: state law opened the door for most automatic knives, and the focus now sits more on intent, place, and certain restricted locations than on the mechanism itself. A pistol crossbow like this isn’t part of that conversation. It’s not covered by Texas knife statutes; it lives in the same mental category as an air rifle or pellet gun—something you use on your own property, at a range, or on private land where you’ve got permission.

That said, the same common sense you use with an OTF knife in Texas applies here. You don’t wave it around in town, you don’t fire bolts where they can carry into a road or neighbor’s yard, and you treat the manual safety and cocking lever like the real weapon controls they are. For rural and suburban Texans, it’s a quiet, controlled way to handle pests and practice marksmanship without bringing centerfire noise into a small space.

Backyard and Barn Use Across the State

In East Texas pines, this pistol crossbow clears squirrels from a corn feeder without spooking deer on the next property. In the Valley, it’s for iguanas on a fence and cans on a cinder block. In the Panhandle, it rides on a mudroom peg for rats in the grain room and armadillos under the propane tank. Five included plastic bolts mean you can shoot a full string of shots, walk the line, collect them by their bright colors, and do it all over again.

Truck, Shed, or Porch—Where It Lives

Where a Texas OTF knife rides in your pocket or on your belt, this pistol crossbow finds its home in static spots: bolted to a garage wall, leaned in a corner by the sliding door, or tucked behind the truck seat for impromptu targets when you’ve got a spare ten minutes on a lease road. The pistol grip keeps it compact enough that it doesn’t tangle with other gear, and the lever-cocking design doesn’t demand the upper-body strength of a heavier hunting rig.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Pistol Crossbows

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, most OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry, as long as you respect location-based restrictions and the few remaining categories of prohibited weapons. That’s why so many people search for an OTF knife Texas instead of ordering blind—they want something that fits both the law and the way they actually live and work here.

Can I use this pistol crossbow for small game on my Texas place?

Within its limits, yes. A 50 lb draw and roughly 200 FPS make it suitable for small varmints and pests at close range—think rats in the barn, rabbits in the garden, or the occasional nuisance critter that’s settled too close to the house. It’s built for controlled, short-distance shots, not long-range hunting. Handle it with the same respect and backstop awareness you’d use with a pellet gun.

How does this compare to carrying a Texas OTF knife for everyday chores?

An OTF knife in Texas is for cutting and close work: feed bags, rope, boxes, quick field chores. This pistol crossbow is for the problems that sit just out of reach—backyard varmints, casual target practice, and teaching new shooters sight alignment and trigger control without recoil or heavy report. They don’t replace each other. They complement each other: one in your pocket, one by the door.

First Evening With It on the Porch

The first night you own it, the air cools off just enough to sit outside. You line up a row of cans on the far fence, cock the lever, thumb off the safety, and feel that smooth, light trigger send a bright bolt down the orange rail. The shot is quick and quiet, the can jumps, and you don’t wake a soul. In a place where you already trust your knives and know every knot in the fence posts, this pistol crossbow slides into the routine: another tool that fits the land, the work, and the way you handle both.

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