Sendero Silent Shot Hunting Blowgun - Green Camo
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Sun’s dropping behind the mesquites and something’s rustling along the sendero. This .40 caliber, 48" camo blowgun rides light on the sling, grips sure in the hand, and keeps forty darts—target, stun, spear, and broadhead—right on the barrel. Quiet shots for small game, pests, and backyard targets when a firearm is too much and noise carries farther than you’d like. For Texans who handle their business without fanfare.
Quiet Work Along the Fence Line
Out past the last yard light, where the fence leans and the mesquite creeps in, you don’t always want to crack off a rifle. Dogs spook. Neighbors notice. Sound carries down a dry creek bed farther than you think. That’s where a 48" hunting blowgun in green camo starts to make sense—quiet, simple, and ready with forty darts riding the barrel.
This .40 caliber Avenger Warrior isn’t a toy. The aircraft aluminum tube runs four feet, straight and true, with a flared mouthpiece at one end and a clean cap at the other. Foam grips break the chill of metal on cold mornings, and the sewn sling lets it ride easy from truck to tank dam, hands free while you’re opening gates or rolling wire.
Why This Hunting Blowgun Belongs in Texas Country
On a place where armadillos dig up the yard, squirrels strip the pecan trees, and pigeons roost in the barn rafters, a quiet hunting blowgun fits right in. This .40 caliber tube gives you enough bore to drive a dart with real authority, but without the bark of a rimfire. For a Texas buyer who already knows their rifles and shotguns, this is another tool on the rack—built for close work.
The barrel wears a green camo finish that disappears against live oak, huisache, or cedar. Quivers wrap the tube, loaded with a mixed spread of darts: twelve 4" target darts for backyard practice, ten 5" spear darts, ten broadhead hunting darts for small game, and eight stun darts when you want impact without deep penetration. Three dart guards cap the business ends when you’re moving between spots, so you’re not tearing up seat fabric or saddlebags.
Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Same Mindset for a Quiet Shot
Folks looking for an OTF knife in Texas are usually after the same things this blowgun offers: fast access, clean function, and a tool that doesn’t call attention to itself. Here, your draw is a breath. Your action is simple—seal your lips on the flared mouthpiece, line up on a fence post or a raccoon at the feeder, and send a dart down a precision aluminum barrel built in the USA.
The feel is plain and honest. Two foam grips keep your hold steady even when sweat and dust mix on a July evening. The sewn sling lays flat across a denim shoulder or over a light jacket running fence in January. It carries like a walking stick, but when it comes off your shoulder, every dart you need is already in reach on the barrel.
Texas Concerns: Power, Safety, and Where You Use It
Texans think in terms of backstops, neighbors, and livestock. A hunting blowgun like this gives you fine control in tight places—a barn alley, a cramped attic, a dock over a stock tank. You choose the dart for the job. Broadheads and spearheads for rabbits, squirrels, and other small game where you’ve got a solid backstop. Stun darts when you’re knocking pests off rafters and don’t want to punch through roofing or siding.
Because the quivers ride the barrel, you see exactly what you’re working with. Sixteen-point and eight-point quivers hold your main loadout, backed by four ten-point quivers that spread the weight along the tube. No rummaging in a pouch. No loose points. When it’s slung in a side-by-side, in the corner of a tack room, or along the floorboard of an old half-ton, the dart guards keep sharp metal from finding leather or vinyl before it finds your target.
Built Like a Texas Tool, Not a Toy
A Texan can feel the difference between a gimmick and a piece of gear. This 48" blowgun runs on a straight aircraft aluminum barrel, bored to .40 caliber and matched to its darts. That tight fit means smooth loading, true flight, and no rattle when you move. The components are made in the USA, which matters when you’re counting on consistent bore size and dart cones that don’t crumble after a few weekends.
Every detail is already dialed in. The foam grips sit where your hands naturally fall. The sling anchors are placed so it hangs level across your back when you’re walking a tree line or working a levee. Darts ride point-forward in their quivers, visible at a glance. This isn’t something you spend the first afternoon trying to "set up." You take it out of the box, hang it on your shoulder, and you’re in business before the sun clears the windmill blades.
Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Hunting Blowguns
Are blowguns legal to use in Texas?
Texas doesn’t have the same kind of spotlight on blowguns that it does on OTF knives or switchblades. There’s no specific statewide ban on owning a blowgun like this for target shooting or small-game use on your own place. But you still answer to common-sense rules: know your backstop, respect neighbors, and check local ordinances or game regulations before hunting with any alternative weapon. Some city limits, HOAs, or wildlife rules may treat a blowgun the same as other projectile gear.
Is this 48" .40 caliber blowgun enough for Texas small game?
For squirrels in pecans, rabbits in fencerows, or grackles crowding a barn, this 48" .40 caliber barrel paired with broadhead and spear darts has the penetration and control you need at reasonable distances. It’s not a .22, and it’s not meant to be. It shines where you can get close—creek bottoms, brushy edges, under feeders—when you want quiet, precise shots without carrying another firearm.
How does a hunting blowgun fit into my Texas kit?
Most Texans won’t swap their rifle for a blowgun. They’ll add it. This rides in the truck with your gloves and fencing pliers, or hangs in the shop next to the pellet gun. You use it for pest control where noise is a problem, for teaching kids shot discipline on backyard targets, or for slipping along a tree line at last light. It’s another purpose-built tool, not a replacement for your main gun.
First Evening Out With the Sendero Silent Shot
Picture a still evening outside town, cicadas buzzing in the cottonwoods, heat finally bleeding out of the clay. You ease along a sendero cut years ago for deer, blowgun slung and quiet. A squirrel flicks its tail high in a live oak over the tank. You slip the sling, feel the foam grips sit into your hands, pick a broadhead dart from the quiver without looking. One breath, steady. The dart whispers down the green camo barrel, and the only sound is the rustle of leaves and a clean thump where you meant it to land. No one three pastures over hears a thing. That’s how this hunting blowgun earns its place in Texas.