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Warrior Arsenal Hunting Blowgun System - Black Aluminum

Price:

24.99


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Lease-Road Hunter Blowgun Kit - Black Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9009/image_1920?unique=b5bfb71

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Out past the last mailbox, this 48" blowgun earns its keep on fence lines and tank dams. The .40-caliber barrel sends target, stun, spear, and broadhead darts with quiet authority, while foam grips and a sewn sling keep it steady on long walks. Forty darts ride ready in quivers, guards in place till it’s time to shoot. For Texans who’d rather slip in close than make noise, this is the small-game and backyard target rig that fits the land.

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Quiet Accuracy for Long Lease Roads and Back Pastures

Out where the county road turns to caliche and the only sound is wind in the grass, a loud rimfire can wear out its welcome. A 48-inch .40-caliber blowgun does a different kind of work. This Lease-Road Hunter Blowgun Kit rides light on your shoulder, moves quiet along a fence line, and gives you controlled shots at cans on a cedar post, grasshoppers on a tank dam, or small game slipping the brush.

The smooth black aircraft aluminum barrel keeps your line of sight clean. Rows of red-tipped darts sit in quivers along the tube, easy to reach without looking. Two foam grips mark where your hands belong, steadying the barrel when you’re tucked behind a mesquite or bracing off a porch post at the deer camp.

Why This Blowgun Belongs in a Texas Truck

On a ranch outside San Angelo or a place backing up to woods near Conroe, this blowgun fills the gap between plinking and pest control. At forty-eight inches, the barrel gives you solid power and a smooth sight picture, but it still rides fine in a truck rack or along the transmission hump. The sewn sling lets you step out, swing it over a shoulder, and walk terraces or creek bottoms with both hands free.

Forty total darts ride ready on the barrel. The twelve four-inch target darts handle backyard practice on feed sacks, cardboard, and steel spinners. Eight stun darts are there for non-lethal hits on pests where you don’t want pass-through or damage. Ten spear darts and twelve broadheads give you penetration for small game when you’re walking the back forty, checking traps, or easing around a tank edge at last light.

Texas Small-Game and Backyard Use, Built Into the Kit

Every piece on this blowgun is laid out for real use, not wall display. The quivers are spaced so you can grab any dart with your forward hand while the rear hand stays anchored on the foam grip and mouthpiece. Three dart guard tip protectors cover loaded points, so you can toss this into the truck, lean it in a barn corner, or carry it into a lease cabin without bare tips catching gear.

In a Hill Country backyard, it becomes an evening target rig, quiet enough not to stir neighbors but accurate enough to keep friendly bets honest. On a Panhandle windbreak or along East Texas timber, the mix of broadhead and spear darts gives you options on small game when you’d rather stay silent than fire a shot.

Built to Hold Up in Texas Conditions

Texas weather doesn’t baby gear. The smooth black aircraft aluminum barrel shrugs off heat in an open-bed truck, cool mornings along the river, and the usual dust that comes with county roads. It won’t swell in humidity or warp if it lives in a tack room or garage. The foam grips stay tacky enough for sweat, rain, or cold fingers in a December north wind.

Because the barrel and components are made in the USA, tolerances stay tight. The .40-caliber bore and dart cones match cleanly, so your breath turns into straight, repeatable shots instead of wasted air. Over time, that consistency is what keeps you hitting bottle caps on a fence post from the same spot in the yard, or threading a broadhead through a gap in the brush along a creek.

How This Hunting Blowgun Fits Texas Carry Reality

You won’t find blowguns spelled out in Texas firearm statutes because they aren’t firearms. Where and how you use this tool still matters. On your own land, a long black blowgun with dart quivers looks like what it is: a purpose-built hunting and target rig. On a rural lease, tossing it in the back seat or hanging it inside a camp house is just part of the spread of gear alongside rifles, bows, and pellet guns.

In town, common sense rules the day. A 48-inch, quiver-loaded tube isn’t something you shoulder-walk down Main Street. It’s something you keep cased in a truck, in a closet, or at the deer lease. Just like any hunting tool in Texas, you treat it with the same respect you’d give a bow or air rifle: know your backdrop, mind your local ordinances, and keep it pointed where you mean business.

Texas Use Case: From Tank Dams to Mesquite Fencelines

Picture an August evening on a place outside Abilene. You step out after supper with this blowgun over your shoulder. Cans line the top strand of a barbed-wire fence. You slip off the dart guards, pick target darts from the quiver, and start working down the line. Later, walking the tank dam, you trade over to spear or broadhead darts in case a rabbit or other small game breaks from the grass. The kit stays light, quiet, and ready, no matter which direction the evening goes.

Texas Use Case: Lease Camp Nights and Family Target Time

At a South Texas lease camp, this blowgun turns slow afternoons and post-hunt evenings into steady target practice. Darts stick into hay bales, cardboard, and old coolers stacked against a mesquite. Kids learn hold, breath, and follow-through without the noise and recoil of a firearm. Adults push distance and precision, walking back from ten to twenty to thirty yards, seeing who can ring the same spot in the foam again and again.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Blowguns

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law used to be strict on automatic knives and switchblades. That changed years back. Today, OTF knives fall under the broader category of knives, not banned weapons. For most adults, they’re legal to own and carry, with blade length and location restrictions applying in certain places like schools or government buildings. The key is knowing that Texas cares more about blade length and location than how the blade opens. Check current state statutes and any local rules before you clip one in your pocket.

Is this 48-inch blowgun practical for Texas land and travel?

For Texas use, the 48-inch length is more asset than burden. It carries comfortably with the sewn sling from truck to tank or along a sendero. In a half-ton, it can ride between seat and console or up against the back glass. On land, that extra barrel gives you steadier aim and more power, which matters when you’re stretching your distance across a pasture or shooting slightly uphill along a creek bank.

How does this kit compare to lighter, shorter target-only blowguns?

Shorter, bare-barrel blowguns travel easier in tight spaces, but they give up stability and power. This 48-inch hunting blowgun earns its keep by coming fully set up: forty mixed-purpose darts, six quivers, three dart guards, foam grips, and a sewn sling. For a Texas buyer who wants one rig that covers backyard practice, pest control around barns, and small-game opportunity walks on larger acreage, this kit delivers more ready-to-use value than a stripped-down tube.

First Use on a Texas Evening

Picture a still evening on a place outside Brenham. Grass is down, sky is turning that dull orange, and the heat finally broke an hour ago. You pull this blowgun from the truck, slip the sling over your shoulder, and walk out behind the barn. Dart guards come off, target darts line the quivers, and a feed sack tacked to a fence becomes your mark. First breath sends a dart in clean. Second and third stack in close. Before long, the rhythm of loading, breathing, and hitting center feels as natural as closing a gate. It doesn’t shout for attention. It just works, the way a good piece of Texas land and a simple, capable tool are supposed to.

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