Brushline Varmint Warrior Blowgun - Pink Camo
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Dust hanging over a caliche road, you park by the tank and spot movement along the fence line. The Brushline Varmint Warrior Blowgun – Pink Camo rides in easy with its sewn sling, foam grips, and 36" aircraft aluminum barrel. Forty darts—target, stun, spear, and broadheads—sit ready in quivers along the tube. Quiet, fast, and hard-hitting on small game and backyard pests, it’s the kind of simple, reliable tool Texans keep by the door.
Quiet Work Along the Brush Line
Late light over mesquite and prickly pear, cicadas running loud, you catch movement out past the stock tank. Too close to the barn for a rifle, too many houses down the county road for noise. This is where the Brushline Varmint Warrior Blowgun - Pink Camo belongs—quiet, controlled, and always within arm’s reach. At three feet long, the aircraft aluminum barrel feels solid without dragging you down when you’re walking a fence line or easing around a barn. The pink camo finish doesn’t try to disappear; it stands out against the dirt and cedar so you don’t lose it in the truck, in tall grass, or under the feed table.Why a Warrior Blowgun Makes Sense in Texas Country
Around Texas land—small acreage or big ranch—there’s always something that needs thinning out: rats in the feed room, pigeons on the rafters, or pests working the chicken coop. The Warrior blowgun gives you a quiet way to handle small game without waking the whole county or spooking stock. This 36" blowgun comes loaded in a way that feels familiar to anyone who’s run a serious varmint rig. You’ve got forty total darts riding in quivers along the barrel: a dozen 4-inch target darts for practice on feed sacks or hanging cans, eight stun darts when you need impact without deep penetration, ten broadhead darts built to bite, and ten 5-inch spear darts that hit with extra weight for tougher small game. Mounted quivers and three dart guard tip protectors keep that whole arsenal organized and safe, so you can walk from barn to back fence with everything you need right on the tube.Set Up for Real Texas Use, Not Just Backyard Play
Plenty of blowguns feel like toys. This one doesn’t. The precision-made aircraft aluminum barrel is cut to match its darts, so when you take a full breath and send a broadhead downrange at a feed bag or a squirrel on a live oak limb, the flight tracks straight. Foam grips are set where your hands actually land, which matters on a humid evening when sweat makes bare aluminum slick. The sewn carrying sling lets you throw it over your shoulder while you’re moving from the house to the barn, up into a deer stand to clear out nesters, or across a rocky draw, hands free to carry feed buckets or tools. The pink camo pattern does two jobs at once: it nods to hunting culture while giving you high visibility against red dirt, gray rock, and dark barn floors. When you drop it leaning against a fence post or back seat of the truck, you find it fast.Texas Backyard Range Days and Small-Game Control
On a hot Saturday with the wind finally laying down, this Warrior blowgun turns any stretch of Texas dirt into a range. Twelve target darts mean you can run drills on paper plates tacked to cedar posts or flattened feed sacks wired to a T-post without burning ammo. Switch to stun darts for closer work where you need a hard hit without deep puncture—useful around outbuildings or tight spaces where you don’t want to bury a sharp point into wood, tin, or anything expensive. The broadheads and 5" spear darts carry more weight and bite for pest control on small game around barns, hay storage, or garden edges. Made in the USA components and a tight barrel-to-dart fit give you repeatable shots. Over time, that matters more than any marketing line. You learn how it shoots in your own wind, on your own place, from the porch steps or the edge of the stock tank.Legal and Practical Considerations for Texas Buyers
How Blowguns Fit into Texas Weapon Laws
Texans ask about the law before they buy anything that launches a projectile. Texas law has specific rules for firearms, knives, and certain prohibited weapons like explosive devices and some clubs. Blowguns aren’t singled out the way switchblades and OTF knives once were, and they don’t fire cartridges or use explosive force. Even so, it’s on you to use this Warrior blowgun responsibly. Treat it like any small-game tool: know your backdrop, keep it off school property, and respect local rules in cities or master-planned communities that may have ordinances about discharging any projectile device. On private land, with a safe backstop and permission, this is where the tool belongs.Texas Landowners, Livestock, and Quiet Tools
Across Texas—Hill Country, Panhandle, Pineywoods, or brush country—landowners run into the same problems: pests in feed, birds in barns, and critters too close to wiring, insulation, or stored grain. The Warrior blowgun’s quiet shot lets you manage those problems without startling cattle, horses, or the neighbors two lots over. That sewn sling keeps it hanging by the mudroom door or on a nail in the tack room, ready to grab when the dogs start barking at the chicken run. In the truck, it lays flat on the back seat or floorboard, easy to spot thanks to the pink camo finish.Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Blowgun Hunting and Varmint Control
Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?
Texas changed its knife laws in 2017, removing the old ban on switchblades and OTF knives. Today, automatic and OTF knives are generally legal to own and carry in Texas, with a key restriction: “location-restricted knives” (blades over 5.5 inches) can’t be carried in certain places like schools, polling locations, and some government buildings. Most everyday OTFs fall under that 5.5-inch mark, but it’s on you to check current statutes and know where you’re headed before you clip anything in your pocket.Is a blowgun like this Warrior model good for Texas small game?
Used at sensible distances with proper darts, a 36" Warrior blowgun gives you quiet, accurate shots on small pests common around Texas barns, sheds, and garden edges. The 5" spear darts and broadhead darts offer better penetration and power for small game than simple target darts. It’s not a long-range rifle; think measured, closer work with a solid backstop, where silence and control matter more than raw distance.How does this pink camo blowgun fit into my existing Texas hunting gear?
Think of it as the tool you reach for between the .22 and the live trap. It won’t replace your rifle or bow in deer season, but it fills the gap for everyday pest control, range practice, and quiet shots where firearms would be overkill or too loud. The sling lets it ride next to your shotgun in the UTV rack or hang inside the barn, and the bright pink camo makes it stand out among greens, browns, and black synthetic stocks.Taking It Out on a Texas Evening
Sun dropping behind a windmill, sky running from orange to deep blue, you step off the porch with the Brushline Varmint Warrior Blowgun - Pink Camo over your shoulder. Crickets take over where the birds left off. Down by the coop, something moves along the fence. You slip the sling off, feel the foam grips set into your palms, and choose a dart without looking—broadhead for a clean, quiet shot. Breath in, steady, then send it. No muzzle blast, no echo off the barn, just the soft thud of work done right. It’s the kind of simple, effective tool Texans keep close: not for show, not for talk—just there when you need it, easy to find in the truck, the tack room, or leaning by the back door.
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