Fence Line Warrior Hunting Blowgun - Black
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Sun’s dropping behind a mesquite windbreak and the rabbits start to move. The Fence Line Warrior Hunting Blowgun rides easy on its sewn sling, foam grips steady in your hand. Forty darts—target, spear, broadhead, stun—sit ready in quivers along the 48" .40-cal barrel. Quiet, accurate, and built from aircraft aluminum, it feels more like a piece of gear than a gadget. For Texans who hunt light and move often, this is the small‑game tool that earns its spot in the truck.
Fence Line Gear for Quiet Work After Sundown
Out past the last yard light, where the caliche drive gives way to pasture, sound carries. You don’t always want a crack across the tank dam when you’re thinning rabbits, pests around the barn, or just knocking cans off a fence post. That’s where a 48-inch, .40 caliber blowgun like the Fence Line Warrior earns its keep. It rides in the truck next to the spotlight and feed buckets, ready when you step out into the crunch of dry grass and mesquite shade.
This isn’t a toy tube you hand a kid in the backyard. The smooth, black aircraft aluminum barrel, loaded quivers, and sewn sling tell you it was built for real work—small game, quiet pest control, and tight target groups along a fence line.
Why This Blowgun Belongs in a Texas Pasture
Texas land is rarely flat and friendly for long. One minute you’re crossing a dry creek bed, the next you’re sliding along a cedar break, trying not to spook the rabbits that have been tearing up the garden. A full 48 inches of .40 caliber barrel gives you the velocity and accuracy you want for that kind of walk-about hunting, without the weight of a long gun on your shoulder.
The Warrior’s two-piece design breaks down for the truck box or behind the seat, but locks up straight when it’s time to shoot. Foam grips are spaced along the barrel so you can hold steady whether you’re braced against a T-post, corner of a corral, or the side of a stock tank. The black finish disappears at dusk, and the bright cones and fletching on the darts are easy to spot in grass and low brush when you’re picking up after a round of shots.
Four Dart Types for Real Texas Small‑Game Scenarios
Texas ground doesn’t give you the same shot twice. One evening it’s rats in the feed room, next morning it’s squirrels working a pecan limb over the yard, and some nights it’s just targets lined along a rusted gate. This hunting blowgun comes with a full spread of forty darts so you can match what you’re shooting at without digging through a tackle box of extras.
For simple target work, you get a dozen target darts built around a sharpened 4-inch wire and cone that sit snug in the barrel. They fly straight down the line—a good way to dial in your breathing and distance on cans, paper, or makeshift pasture targets. When you step up to small game around the barn or along a tree line, the ten 5-inch spear darts bite deeper and hit with more authority, especially inside typical backyard and fence-line distances.
Twelve broadhead hunting darts give you the penetration for tougher small game in brushy draws or around rock piles, where you might only get one clean angle before they vanish. For pests you don’t want to tear up, the eight stun darts deliver impact without the same penetration—useful around sheds, equipment, or spots where you need control more than damage.
Every dart type rides in its own quiver—one sixteen-point, one eight-point, and four ten-point rings spaced along the barrel—so you can reach for what you need without breaking your stance. Three dart guard tip protectors cover the business ends in transit, keeping gear and fingers out of harm’s way.
Built to Survive Heat, Dust, and a Truck Cab
Texas gear lives in trucks, barns, and camp trailers, not velvet cases. The Warrior’s barrel is aircraft aluminum—tough enough for rattling around behind a bench seat or riding in a side-by-side over washboard roads. It shrugs off heat when you leave it in a parked truck in August and doesn’t complain about dust or humidity swings out in the Hill Country or up on the caprock.
Two foam grips break up the barrel so you don’t have to bare-hand hot metal after sitting in the sun. The sewn sling is not decoration; it lets you carry the blowgun cross-body while you haul feed, work dogs, or climb through barbed wire without losing control of it. Components are made here in the States, which shows in the way the darts seat cleanly and release with consistent blow pressure, shot after shot.
Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Hunting Blowguns
Are blowguns legal to use in Texas?
Texas law is specific about firearms, knives, and some other weapons, but it does not single out blowguns the way it does switchblades or certain club-type weapons. That said, you still have to respect local ordinances, game regulations, and common sense. Don’t discharge any hunting blowgun inside city limits where it’s illegal to fire air rifles or bows, and don’t use it on protected wildlife or out of season. Think of it like a quiet hunting or pest-control tool: fine on private land with permission and within Texas Parks and Wildlife rules, not a toy for neighborhood streets.
How far is this 48" .40 caliber blowgun accurate for Texas-style shooting?
Most Texas shooters find that with steady breathing and a bit of practice, a 48-inch .40 caliber blowgun will stack darts reliably in the ten- to twenty-yard window. That’s ideal for backyard target work, rabbits in a garden, squirrels on a low limb, or pests around a barn. The longer barrel gives darts time to build speed, and the foam grips help you lock in on a fence post, gate rail, or shed corner for repeatable groups without wrestling the tube.
Why pick this blowgun over a basic single-dart tube?
A bare tube might be cheaper, but it slows you down. With this Warrior setup, quivers full of forty darts ride on the barrel, guarded at the tips, ready to pull without digging in pockets. The sling keeps your hands free crossing a rocky draw or climbing over a fence. Four dart types mean you’re not stuck with the wrong point for the target in front of you. If you’re running a place where a quiet shot beats a loud one—around livestock, neighbors, or skittish game—that kind of readiness matters more than saving a few bucks on a plain tube.
Field Use Across Texas Landscapes
Picture a Saturday evening on a piece of family land outside town. You’ve filled the troughs, checked the gates, and there’s a little light left under a peach-colored sky. The Warrior rides on your shoulder, black barrel against a faded shirt, quivers lined with red and green-tipped darts. A rabbit moves along the fence line by the garden, or a squirrel works low on a pecan limb. You slide the blowgun off the sling, hand finding the front foam grip without looking. One dart drawn, one breath, and the shot is more whisper than report.
Later, you’re back at the house, kids or friends setting up cans on posts, counting off paces along the drive. Same blowgun, different darts, same easy rhythm of draw, seat, breathe, and send. It’s the kind of tool that fits right into Texas life—dust on the barrel, foam grips worn a little smooth, always in the truck when the land gives you a reason to use it.