I live in Mid Michigan and have about eight or nine bamboos that I grow.
The Faragesias are hardy (for the most part) clumpers. Bamboos will take at least five years to get established in Michigan. I had a beautiful Faragesia that was going along great for eight years and last year, it bloomed. I thought it had died but I noticed this weekend that it was putting out more flowers so MAYBE it will survive. (Most bamboos die after they flower). It may have been a rufa but I'm not sure. It did not have clums large enough for arrows. Also, Michigan is at the end of their range and they will not grow as large. If you've found a cheap supplier, by all means buy them. Bamboos are beautiful plants and stay green all year.
I also have a Japanese Arrow bamboo that will finally be putting up clums this year that I can use for arrows. (I moved it around every year until three years ago). They are not top hardy in reallly cold Michigan winters but have been ok the past couple of winters. They ARE root hardy however and will survive (down to -5 I think). IF you have a protected place along a south facing wall, by all means plant Pseudosasa japonica and if it gets really cold, mulch the bed with straw during the winter.
PM me if you need more information or if you want some bamboo plants. I have three or four ground cover bamboos - low growing runners.
I also have some phyllostachys flexuosa that grows to 15 feet. The phyllostachys bamboos are the timber bamboos and have several that are hardy up north. I've made arrows out of the flexuosa when it put up small clums but they've gotten too big now for even atlatl darts...