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Warrior Arsenal Hunting Blowgun System - Red Aluminum

Price:

24.99


Warrior Arsenal .40 Cal Hunting Blowgun - Green
Warrior Arsenal .40 Cal Hunting Blowgun - Green
25.99 25.99
Urban Warrior Arsenal Blowgun - Black Aluminum
Urban Warrior Arsenal Blowgun - Black Aluminum
25.99 25.99

Fence Line Stalker Hunting Blowgun - Red Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8993/image_1920?unique=e65b90a

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Middle of a hot afternoon, you’re walking a fence line, checking wire and watching for rabbits that tear up the garden. This .40 caliber blowgun rides light on your shoulder, forty darts at hand, from target tips to broadheads and spears. Foam grips keep your hold steady, the sewn sling leaves your hands free. It’s quiet, simple, and made for folks who put in miles on their own land and want small‑game control without hauling a long gun every step.

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BGW36R

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Fence Lines, Tank Dams, and a Red Barrel in Your Hand

Out past the last yard light, along a sagging fence where mesquite leans into the wire, a long gun feels like too much and empty hands feel like not enough. That’s where a 36-inch, .40 caliber blowgun with forty darts on board starts to make sense. It rides easy on your shoulder, red barrel catching a little dusk light, quiet enough not to spook anything working the grass along the fence.

This isn’t backyard toy gear. The aircraft aluminum barrel runs a true bore the full 36 inches, matched to cones and darts that seal and fly right. You get a working small-game setup that feels at home on a lease road, a caliche driveway, or circling a stock tank at first light.

Why This Blowgun Belongs in Texas Country

Texas land is wide and broken. One day you’re walking the back of a five-acre lot on the edge of town, the next you’re easing around a tank dam on a place that takes half a morning to fence-check. A rig like this .40 caliber Warrior blowgun fits both. It gives you quiet reach for small game and pests without shouldering a rifle everywhere you go.

The sewn sling lets you carry it like a light walking stick, barrel across your back when you’re opening gates or hauling feed. Two foam grips break up the 36-inch length, so whether you’re posted on a berm or leaning in a barn doorway, you can settle into a steady, repeatable hold. Yellow cones stacked in the quivers tell you at a glance how much you’ve got left before you head back to the house.

Texas Small-Game Work with Forty Darts at Hand

The way this blowgun is built, your options are already loaded when you step off the porch. Twelve target darts with four-inch wire shafts handle cans on a fence post, plywood circles hung from a live oak, or a steel spinner tacked up on the side of a barn. They fly straight and bite deep enough to stay put, so practice feels honest.

When it’s more than practice, the ten spear darts and ten broadhead hunting darts change the way you work a pasture. The five-inch spears give you penetration on small game nosing around a hay ring or working a brush pile. Broadheads bring more cutting surface when you’re trying to make clean, fast kills instead of just stinging a rabbit and watching it run. Eight stun darts round out the load for knocking critters off a fence or thinning nuisance birds where a firearm would be too much trouble.

Quivers wrap the barrel like a built-in belt: a sixteen-point rack, an eight-point, and four ten-point quivers spread along the red tube. Three tip guards cover the business ends when you’re walking through brush or leaning it in the corner of a truck bed. Nothing rattles, nothing jingles, and you’re not digging in a pocket for loose darts while something slips back into the grass.

Legal Quiet: Texas Use, Texas Neighbors

Out where houses sit close and fences are shared, not every problem calls for a rimfire report. A blowgun doesn’t fall under the same Texas conversations folks have about switchblades or OTF knife Texas carry rules. You’re not worrying about blade length, automatic mechanisms, or whether a small-town officer understands state preemption. You’re holding a simple tube that sends a dart with lung power and practice.

That quiet matters. Working the side yard in a subdivision on the edge of San Antonio, knocking cans off a target frame in a Midland backyard, or keeping pests off a garden behind a shop in Nacogdoches, a silent shot keeps peace with neighbors and keeps attention off your fence line. It’s the same thinking that has folks reading up on Texas OTF knife law before they clip a new blade in their pocket—use the right tool for the place you’re standing.

Built Like a Tool, Not a Toy

The barrel is aircraft aluminum, straight and stiff enough that a 36-inch length doesn’t flex when you lay it across a fence post or brace it against a porch rail. The gloss red anodized finish shrugs off the kind of scuffs you pick up moving through cedar or mesquite, and you can spot it in tall grass if you set it down for a minute to fix a stretch of wire.

Components are made in the USA, fitted to the .40 caliber bore so cones seat clean and shoot repeatable. The black foam grips don’t soak up sweat the way bare metal will in an August heat wave, and they keep bare hands from freezing to the tube on a cold Panhandle morning. The sling is a sewn strap, not a cord someone tied on after the fact, so it rides the same way every time you throw it over your shoulder.

Back Forty Practice, Lease Road Reality

On a small place outside of town, this blowgun turns a scrap of fence into a simple shooting lane. You walk a line of hanging cans, take shots from different posts, and learn how far a good lungful of air will send a dart. Later in the year, on a lease road out near Sonora, the same skill lets you slip a broadhead dart into a rabbit at the edge of the brush without banging a tailgate or echoing down a dry draw.

Truck, Barn, or House: Where It Lives

In Texas, most tools either end up in the truck, the barn, or by the back door. A 36-inch blowgun with foam grips and a sling fits all three. It’ll lay easy along a bench seat or behind the front seats of a crew cab. It hangs on a nail in the tack room without taking more space than a garden hoe. And it stands ready by the back door for a quick walk around the yard at dusk when you hear something moving under the pecan trees.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Blowguns

Are blowguns legal to use in Texas?

Texas law doesn’t single out blowguns the way it does firearms or certain knives. There’s no statewide prohibition on owning or using a blowgun for target practice or small‑game hunting where local rules and hunting regulations allow it. You still need to respect property lines, noise ordinances, and Texas Parks & Wildlife rules on what you can take and when. For city limits and specific game regulations, it’s smart to check local ordinances and current TPWD guidelines before you start shooting.

Is this blowgun suited for Texas small‑game hunting?

Yes. The .40 caliber bore, combined with spear and broadhead hunting darts, gives enough power and penetration for small‑game work at practical blowgun distances. Around a stock tank, garden, or brushy fence corner, it delivers quiet shots that don’t carry like a rifle crack. As with any hunting tool in Texas, shot placement, distance, and knowing your limits matter more than the gear itself.

How does this compare to carrying a rimfire or air rifle?

A rimfire or air rifle will always give you more range and forgiving power, but they’re louder, bulkier, and bring more legal attention inside city limits. This blowgun is lighter, simpler, and nearly silent. For close‑range pest control and relaxed practice on private land, it’s a handy complement—not a replacement—to the rifle you already trust.

First Walk with It on Your Own Ground

Picture late evening, heat finally bleeding off a gravel drive, cicadas loud in the trees. You slip the red barrel across your back, sling over one shoulder, and start down the fence line. Foam grips under your palm, yellow cones bright against black quivers, you move quiet, watching the grass at the field edge. When something stirs near the tank dam, you don’t have to go back for a rifle or wake the place with a shot. You’re already carrying what you need, the simple, silent tool that fits the land you walk.

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