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Urban Warrior Arsenal Blowgun - Camo Aluminum

Price:

19.99


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Urban Range Warrior Hunting Blowgun - Camo Aluminum

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9011/image_1920?unique=2adc469

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Out past the last stoplight, where the cul-de-sacs meet mesquite and tank dams, this 48" Warrior blowgun comes alive. The .40 caliber aircraft aluminum tube wears an urban camo finish, slung easy over a shoulder, already loaded with 40 darts for targets and small game. Foam grips steady your shot, quivers keep every spear, broadhead, target, and stun dart ready. No extras to chase, nothing missing. Just a quiet, USA-made hunting blowgun built for long fencelines and late evenings.

19.99 19.99 USD 19.99

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Urban Range Warrior Blowgun in a Texas Edge-of-Town Evening

Sun's sliding behind a row of metal roofs, dogs starting up down the block, and you're out where the last mailbox gives way to pasture. That stretch between back fences and mesquite scrub is where a 48-inch Warrior blowgun earns its keep. Four feet of .40 caliber aircraft aluminum, wrapped in urban camo, hanging light on a sewn sling as you walk the fence line, checking traps, glassing for rabbits, or just knocking cans off an old fence post.

This isn't a toy from a tourist rack. It's a hunting blowgun built for the Texas edges—where subdivisions end, caliche dust starts, and there's still enough room to send a dart without the neighbors calling it in.

Why This Hunting Blowgun Belongs on a Texas Fence Line

Texas land doesn't sit still. One acre behind a workshop, ten acres outside New Braunfels, a narrow strip along a creek in Cedar Park—they all have the same mix of brush, trash targets, and small game. A 48-inch blowgun gives you the length and sighting line to shoot clean down that space without hauling a rimfire or bow every time you step out back.

The Warrior's aircraft aluminum barrel keeps it straight and true through heat, dust, and the odd knock against a T-post. At .40 caliber, the bore and darts are matched tight enough that you feel the seal when you draw breath, and the release hits with more authority than folks expect from a quiet tube. Foam grips break the cold of metal on a winter call-out, and on a humid August night they keep from slipping, even when you’re sweating through a long walk under a barbed-wire cross fence.

Urban camo along the barrel doesn't try to disappear in pine or coastal grass; it fades into truck beds, barn walls, and back patios. It's built for the modern Texas homestead, where steel buildings, gravel drives, and patchy mesquite break up the line of sight.

Texas-Smart Loadout: 40 Darts Ready for Small Game and Targets

Most people in Texas who pick up a hunting blowgun don’t want to spend another week hunting down accessories. This one comes loaded the way a dealer would set it up if you asked, "What should I grab if I want to be ready for anything on the back of my place?"

You get 12 target darts with four-inch sharpened wire shafts, perfect for swinging by the tank or stock pond and lining up cans on a dead limb. Ten five-inch spear darts and 10 broadhead hunting darts bring the penetration you need for rabbits slipping through the grass edge or squirrels hugging the dark side of a post oak. Eight stun darts add a non-penetrating option when you’re working close to sheds, feeders, or anything you don’t want to punch.

Quivers ride the barrel like they were grown there: a 16-point, an 8-point, and four 10-point units spaced so you can reach what you need without looking. Three dart tip guards cap the clusters, keeping broadheads and spear points from slicing into gear in the truck or snagging sleeves when you move through cedar and huisache. Nothing rattles, nothing flops loose. It feels like carrying a quiet, self-contained kit, not a handful of loose parts.

Where a Warrior Blowgun Fits into Texas Carry Culture

In Texas, people talk a lot about what rides in their truck console or on their belt. A hunting blowgun like this Warrior finds its place leaned by the mudroom door, hanging off a hook in the barn, or laid along the back seat under a window. It’s the tool you grab when you don’t need the crack of a rifle or the reach of a shotgun, but you still want clean, precise shots across a yard, easement, or tree line.

The sewn sling lets it sit flat against your back when you climb through a fence or onto a four-wheeler. At four feet long, it stretches across a standard pickup cab diagonal without jamming under a pedal or knocking a drink out of the cup holder. The urban camo finish keeps it from screaming for attention when it rides in plain view—most folks read it as another piece of gear, not a weapon.

In a state where neighbors may be within earshot but a good target lane is still worth protecting, a quiet blowgun earns its place. You can work through a string of target darts behind a metal building in the evening without spooking cattle or waking a baby two houses down.

Texas Law, Quiet Weapons, and Responsible Use

Knife and firearm laws draw most of the questions here. A hunting blowgun like this Warrior doesn't fall under Texas switchblade or OTF knife statutes, and it doesn't fire a cartridge or shell. There isn’t a statewide blowgun ban written into the typical knife or handgun codes a dealer keeps behind the counter.

That said, Texas still expects common sense. Discharging any kind of hunting tool inside city limits can bump up against local ordinances, especially in tighter neighborhoods and incorporated towns. Out on county land, you’ve got more space and fewer regulations, but you still owe your neighbors safe backstops and clear fields of fire. This blowgun is quiet, but it hits hard enough with broadheads and spear darts that you treat every shot like it matters.

If you’re running it near livestock, barns, or along shared fencelines, you’ll want to stay on your side, verify your backdrop, and keep the hunting darts pointed away from anything you can’t afford to poke. Responsible use travels faster than rumors in most Texas communities, and it’s how tools like this keep their welcome.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Hunting Blowguns

Are blowguns legal to use on my property in Texas?

Blowguns aren’t singled out in the same Texas statutes that cover firearms, OTF knives, or switchblades, so at the state level they generally fall under broader hunting and safety rules. On your own land outside city limits, using a hunting blowgun for small game or target work is typically treated like any other quiet hunting tool, as long as you’re shooting safely and within hunting regulations when you pursue game. Inside town limits, city ordinances may restrict any projectile weapons, so it’s worth checking your local code before you start slinging darts across a tight backyard.

Is a 48-inch Warrior blowgun practical for Texas backyards?

For most Texas yards and small-acreage places, 48 inches is the sweet spot. It’s long enough to give you a steady sight line across a typical fence-to-fence distance and to reach out along a tank bank or down a caliche lane, but still compact enough to carry through a side gate or stash in a truck without fighting it. The sling and foam grips make it easy to move between the back porch, the barn, and the far corner of the property without feeling like you’re juggling a full-length rifle.

How does this Warrior compare to cheaper blowgun kits online?

Most cheaper kits cut corners in the same places: thin, flexy tubing; loose-fitting darts; and quivers that feel like an afterthought. This Warrior runs a straight aircraft aluminum barrel matched to its .40 caliber darts, so you don’t lose power to sloppy fit. The 40-dart mix—target, spear, broadhead, and stun—covers everything a Texas buyer typically wants to do from target practice to small game, right out of the box. The quivers, foam grips, guards, and sling are already installed, so you’re not chasing parts or improvising carry. It’s built to live on real property, not just hang in a garage.

First Evening Out with the Warrior on Texas Ground

Picture this: supper’s done, heat finally broken, cicadas tuning up beyond the back porch. You step off the slab, Warrior slung along your shoulder, padding down a short run of gravel toward the back fence. Cans wait on a T-post, maybe a rabbit stirs near the tank berm. Your hand closes around the foam grip, you feel the smooth, cool run of camo aluminum, pick a dart from the quiver without thinking. One breath, one soft push, and the dart is away—no crack, no echo, just the quick thud of impact and the quiet satisfaction of a shot placed right. For Texans who live between town and pasture, that’s where this hunting blowgun fits. Not as a novelty, but as another honest tool in the line between house and horizon.

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