Item AC2
This Item was Sold on 6 April 2015
for $293
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American Artifacts web page.
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This blowgun ( blow gun or blowpipe ) was collected in the Upper Amazon Basin near Letticia, Colombia. It was made by the Yagua Indians who live in Colombia and NE Peru. I acquired this blowgun from a Dentist from California in the early 1990s. He collected it as a young man in the 1950s or early 1960s. This type of blowgun was used by the indigenous people to hunt birds, monkeys, sloths and other small games. The length is more than 7 feet. This is an artifact, the real thing and not something made for the tourist trade. There is a single tube and the tube is spiral wrapped with the bark from a vine or tall tree. There is a hardwood mouthpiece on one end. Both ends are sealed with a tar like substance that might be a plant extract of some kind. The dart case is small and it appears to be made out of palm leaves that are sewn together at the base. There are more than a dozen darts in the quiver and several have Kapok wrapped around the terminus. A small bark cloth bag is attached with cordage and the bag is full of Kapok that can be wrapped around the blunt end of a dart before use. Very nice and practical. Light weight and very functional. The blowgun and quiver are in very good to excellent condition as shown in the photo below. The wrap around the blowgun is slightly loose along part of the length, but complete and in excellent condition. Please note: The cost to ship this blowgun and quiver set will be between $25 and $40 to an address in the USA. The blowgun and dart quiver must be shipped in separate packages. The cost to ship this blowgun overseas will be much more because of size restrictions. I lived in Panama for nearly 20 years (1950s and 1960s). I spent some time with the indigenous Indians near the border with Colombia. I went on a couple of Howler Monkey hunting trips using blowguns. I learned the following from the native people: Blowgun darts are usually made out of sharpened Palmwood splinters. Kapok [ cotton-like material from seed pods on local trees] is wrapped around the blunt end of the darts to a diameter that is snug with the bore diameter of the inner tube. The darts are often tipped with poison from the Dendrobates Poison Arrow Frogs ( Curare is more commonly used in South America ). Some blowgun quivers include a rat jaw (Piranha jaw in the Amazon) that is attached to the quiver with a short cord. I have read that the teeth on the jaw is used to sharpen the dart tip, but in Panama, the dart is sharpened using a honing stone and the jaw is used to cut a small circumferential groove around the perimeter of the dart near the poisoned tip, especially when hunting monkeys. After the dart penetrates the monkey's skin, the monkey tries to remove the dart, but the circumferential groove weakens the poison dart tip so that it snaps off and stays inside the monkey. It takes a long time for the monkey to slow down and die. More than half of the monkeys die high in the treetops and are lost to the hunters. I am not sure if any of this is the same as how the darts are prepared in the Amazon, but I thought that this information would be of value to anyone interested in blowguns. I would prefer that the buyer not use this blowgun for hunting. It is a collectible. Instead, it would be better to make a blowgun and dart set using PVC tubing, shish kabob sticks and cotton using the dimensions of this blowgun as a model. |