Fence Line Spearhead Throwing Knife Set - Black Steel
10 sold in last 24 hours
Heat’s still hanging over the pasture when the chores are done and you’re walking the fence line behind the house. This three-piece throwing knife set rides quiet on a nylon belt sheath, steel balanced around a nine-inch spear point profile. Tough enough for plywood, fence posts, or a backyard target by the shop. Simple, all-steel construction you won’t baby, with three matching blades so you can throw in rhythm instead of chasing one knife back and forth.
Fence Line Practice with a Purpose-Built Throwing Knife Set
End of a long day, sky going purple over a caliche road, and there’s still a little light left behind the house. That bare spot on the fence line or plywood target by the shop starts to look like a place to clear your head. This three-piece spearhead throwing knife set was built for that hour—nothing fancy, just steel, balance, and a sheath that rides fine on a worn belt.
Why This Spearhead Throwing Knife Belongs in a Texas Routine
These are nine-inch full-tang throwing knives, each one cut from solid steel so there’s no handle scale to crack when you miss high and clip the post instead of the knot in the middle. The black-coated body with a clean silver edge gives a clear sight picture as the blade spins into a cedar round or treated 2x10 screwed into a mesquite. At 4.5 inches of spear point and 4.5 inches of handle, the balance sits right near center, making half-spin or full-spin throws feel predictable—important when summer dust and sweat start to slick your grip.
The nylon belt sheath keeps all three knives in line, stacked tight so they don’t rattle much when you’re crossing a dry creek bed or walking from the barn to the back fence. A simple strap holds them in, no snaps to fight when your fingers are stiff from work or cold from a blue norther.
Control, Consistency, and Steel That Can Take a Beating
Throwing in Texas means boards left in the sun, target faces that have seen rain, and the occasional bad throw into hard post oak. These knives answer that with all-steel construction and a matte finish that doesn’t glare back at you when the sun’s low. The spear point profile drives straight, so even when you hit off-center on a rough fence plank, you’re less likely to see wild deflection.
Each handle is slim, drilled at the pommel with a lanyard hole for tie-offs if you want to mark them or hang them in the shop. The absence of rubber or plastic grip means nothing to swell, chip, or peel in a Panhandle freeze or August heat on the Gulf Coast. It’s the kind of build a ranch hand appreciates—easy to wipe clean, slow to complain.
Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Throwing Knife Sets
Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?
Texas law opened up years back. Switchblades and OTF-style automatic knives are legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as the blade falls within the general location-restricted knife rules. The main concerns now are blade length over 5.5 inches in certain locations—schools, polling places, bars, and a few other restricted spots. This three-piece throwing knife set isn’t an OTF knife at all; it’s a fixed-blade throwing set meant for private land, backyards, and controlled ranges. Keep them on your own place, on private property with permission, or at a range, and you’re operating where Texas law expects folks to use tools and gear like this.
Can I practice with this throwing knife set in my Texas backyard?
On your own property or with the landowner’s permission, setting up a safe throwing lane is common across the state—from Hill Country acre lots to Panhandle farmyards. This nine-inch spearhead throwing knife set works well on a dedicated target: a round wood slice, heavy plywood, or a purpose-built throwing board mounted solid on a fence or post. Make sure there’s a real backstop, no neighbor’s yard or county road behind it, and keep throws aimed away from livestock, equipment, and buildings. The nylon sheath keeps the knives together when you’re walking from the house to your target, so you’re not making trips with bare blades in hand.
Is this the right throwing knife set for a first-time buyer?
If you’re new to throwing and just want something durable to start with on Texas ground, this set makes sense. The nine-inch length and full-steel build give you enough weight to feel the rotation without being unforgiving, and the three-matched knives mean you can throw in groups of three instead of chasing a single blade. It’s not a showpiece; it’s for learning distance, spin, and consistency on a board you don’t mind chewing up. If you live in town, check your local ordinances and always throw on private property with a clear safe zone. On land outside the city limits, mounted to a barn wall target or freestanding frame, it’s an easy way to pick up a new skill after chores.
Texas Knife Law, Common Sense, and Where This Set Fits
Texas knife law leans on personal responsibility. Location-restricted knife rules focus on certain public places and long blades, not on what you do on your own stretch of ground out past the city limits sign. This three-knife set is tailored for that private space. You’re not dropping these in a pocket for town; you’re strapping them into the nylon sheath and heading to the back of the lot, the tree line, or a target stand out by the stock tank.
On a ranch, lease, or rural backyard, knives like this sit in the same mental shelf as a .22 for plinking—tools that stay pointed in a safe direction with a clear backstop. They’re not for tossing around at a tailgate or in a crowded campsite. Respect that, and they fit cleanly into how Texans use and store blades on their own places.
Built for the Way Texans Actually Use Throwing Knives
Across the state, from piney woods camp spots to scrubby South Texas pastures, throwing practice is something you do off to the side—by a barn wall, against a target tree stump, or next to a metal building where you can hang a board. This spearhead throwing knife set makes that easy. The nylon sheath threads onto a belt when you step out of the truck, leaving your hands free for a cooler, a sack of feed, or a bundle of scrap lumber you’re turning into a target stand.
Once you’re set up, the three matching blades mean you can work a tight pattern into one knot in the wood, watching your grouping shrink as you figure out distance and grip. The black-and-silver contrast lets you pick up rotation in the air, even in low evening light. When the sun drops and you’re done, they slide back into the sheath in seconds, blades hidden, handle ends up, ready to ride back to the house or hang on a nail in the shop until the next evening.
First Throw on Home Ground
Picture a still evening west of town, cicadas starting up in the pecans. You’ve screwed a weathered board onto an old fence post, chalked a rough circle in the center. The sheath rides easy on your belt as you walk up, three nine-inch spearhead knives resting in a straight row. You draw one, feel the clean steel handle settle between your fingers, step off your distance in the dust, and let it go. The spin is smooth, the point bites into the grain with a solid, dull thud. Two more throws, three blades buried in the same board on your own piece of Texas ground. No show, no crowd—just you, a fence line, and a simple set of throwing knives made for this exact kind of quiet practice.
| Blade Length (inches) | 4.5 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 9 |
| Blade Color | Silver |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Spear Point |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Handle Material | Steel |
| Theme | Tactical |
| Handle Length (inches) | 4.5 |
| Set Count | 3 |
| Sheath/Holster | Nylon sheath |