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Field Arsenal Warrior Hunting Blowgun - Green Camo Aluminum

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41.99


Field Arsenal Warrior Hunting Blowgun Kit - Black Aluminum
Field Arsenal Warrior Hunting Blowgun Kit - Black Aluminum
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Camo Range Warrior Hunting Blowgun - Green .40 Cal

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9013/image_1920?unique=ccc76ae

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Late afternoon on a Hill Country sendero, this .40 cal blowgun rides light on your shoulder, already loaded. The camo-green aircraft aluminum tube breaks down into two pieces for easy truck or pack carry, but shoots straight and hard when it counts. Forty darts—target, stun, spear, and broadhead—sit ready in quivers along the barrel, with foam grips and a sewn sling keeping it steady. For Texas ranch plinking and small-game control, this Warrior feels made for the back forty.

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Camo Range Warrior Blowgun in Texas Country

Out past the last cattle guard, where the caliche road gives way to mesquite and prickly pear, this .40 cal blowgun starts to make sense. It's quiet. It rides light on your shoulder by that sewn sling. And when you're walking a fence line or easing along a dry creek bed for a shot at small game, the Camo Range Warrior Hunting Blowgun - Green .40 Cal feels more like a familiar piece of kit than a novelty.

The green barrel with purple and tan camo bands doesn't shout for attention. It just blends into cedar, oak, and sand-hued rock. Aircraft aluminum keeps the 54-inch tube straight and true, but the two-piece build means it breaks down fast to ride in a ranch truck, behind a seat, or in a closet corner without taking over the room.

Why This Hunting Blowgun Belongs in a Texas Kit

Most days in the country, you don't need a full rifle case just to walk from the barn to the tank. A solid .40 caliber hunting blowgun gives you options—varmint control around a deer feeder, small-game shots along an East Texas creek, or quiet backyard target runs in a San Antonio suburb where you don't want to bother the neighbors.

This Warrior model ships set up for those exact jobs. Forty darts ride the barrel in quivers: a dozen 4-inch target darts for practice on hay bales or foam blocks, eight stun darts when you want impact without penetration, ten spear darts, and ten broadhead hunting darts built for more serious small-game work. The darts fit that precision-made aluminum bore snug, so when you line up on a fence post or a squirrel on a live oak limb, the shot leaves clean.

Foam grips sit where your hands naturally land, one near the mouthpiece, one at mid-barrel. They matter on hot, slick days when the South Texas humidity shows up early. The sewn sling runs black along the length, easy to throw cross-body while you’re stepping over barbed wire or climbing into a blind.

Texas Field Use: From Back Forty to Creek Bottom

Texas land comes in all types—Post oak belt sand, Hill Country rock, Panhandle grass, river-bottom mud. A blowgun has to move through all that without begging to be put down. This hunting blowgun answers that by keeping weight low and readiness high. The quivers keep every dart at your fingertips, no fumbling with pockets when hogs step out or a rabbit breaks from the brush.

On a Brazos bottom walk, you might start with target darts just knocking cans off a fence. Switch to broadheads without ever setting the barrel down when you see a squirrel cutting across a limb. In Hill Country cedar breaks, the stun darts give you a way to work up close practice shots at marked trees and stumps without worrying about buried broadheads. Each dart type has a Texas use: target for skill, spear and broadhead for meat, stun for low-risk impact shooting on hard or unknown backstops.

Quiet Control on Rural Texas Land

On small acreage outside town, gunfire can draw attention you don't want every Saturday afternoon. A .40 cal blowgun runs quiet. You feel the shot more than you hear it. That makes it a natural fit for landowners who still want to train kids on marksmanship, animal awareness, and shot discipline without turning the place into a live-fire range.

Packable for Lease and Camp Life

Because the barrel breaks into two pieces, this hunting blowgun vanishes into a lease truck, camp trailer, or closet in a college apartment. At the deer lease near Junction or a fishing camp on Toledo Bend, it becomes the go-to gear for camp competitions and slow-afternoon hunts along senderos and logging roads.

Texas Concerns: Power, Safety, and Responsibility

Any hunting blowgun worth carrying in Texas needs to balance power with control. The Warrior’s .40 caliber bore and dart mix deliver real penetration with spear and broadhead darts—enough for small game when used with care and close shots. That's why Avenger includes dart guard tip protectors already on the barrel. When the blowgun is slung in a truck cab or leaned in a mudroom, those guards matter.

Quivers keep the darts organized—one 16-point, one 8-point, and four 10-point rings—so loose, rolling darts on a tailgate or porch rail don't become a problem. Foam grips give you sure handling when your hands are dusty, wet, or cold in a Panhandle wind. The whole package feels like it was built for people who know how to manage tools on real land, not a shop counter toy.

Avenger builds the components here in the U.S., and you feel that in fit: the darts seat consistently, the barrel joints lock in square, and the mouthpiece and end caps don’t wobble loose after a day of walking and shooting.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Hunting Blowguns

Are blowguns legal to own and use in Texas?

Texas law does not treat a blowgun like a firearm or a switchblade. For most adults, owning and using a blowgun on private property is generally legal. Where you have to pay attention is how and where you use it. Discharging any projectile in city limits can fall under local ordinances, even with a quiet hunting blowgun. Hunting with blowguns for certain species may also be restricted by Texas Parks and Wildlife regulations. The smart move is to check both your city or county rules and TPWD guidelines before using this blowgun for any live-animal hunting, especially on public land.

Is this blowgun a good fit for a Texas deer lease or ranch?

For a Texas lease or ranch, this Warrior model fits right in. The 54-inch .40 caliber barrel has enough length for accurate shooting down senderos and across stock tanks, and the two-piece construction makes it easy to stash in a lease trailer, bunkhouse corner, or behind a ranch truck seat. With 40 total darts—target, stun, spear, and broadhead—you can handle everything from camp competitions to small pest control without packing extra gear. The sling keeps it on your shoulder while you’re hauling corn, checking cameras, or working around pens.

Should I choose this hunting blowgun over a cheaper, smaller model?

If your shooting will stay backyard-close and casual, a smaller, lighter tube could work. But if you’re serious about accuracy, distance, and small-game capability on Texas land, this 54-inch .40 cal blowgun earns its keep. The longer barrel gives better control on those 15–20 yard shots you see along senderos or under oaks, and the included dart mix saves you from piecing together a kit one pack at a time. For many Texas buyers, it becomes the dedicated ranch and lease blowgun, while smaller tubes get left at home.

Built for the Way Texans Actually Shoot

Picture a late fall evening on a Central Texas place. Sun dropping, air finally cooling off. You've got this green camo blowgun slung loose over one shoulder, a feed bucket in the other hand. On the walk back from the feeder, you spot movement in a pecan limb over the creek. You set the bucket down, slide your hand to the foam grip, ease a broadhead dart into position from the quiver, and draw a steady breath behind the black mouthpiece.

In that quiet, with dogs barking far off and nothing else but the hum of insects, a loud rifle shot would feel out of place. This hunting blowgun doesn’t. It fits the land, the work, and the way Texans like to handle their business—calm, deliberate, and ready when it counts.

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