Earth Inspired Smudge Incense – Laurel
Earth Inspired Smudge Incense – Laurel is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Earth Inspired Smudge Incense – Laurel is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Laurel smudge incense sticks made from natural herbs and essential oils — approximately 9 sticks per pack, organic and cruelty-free.
What You Get
- Each pack contains approximately 9 hand-rolled incense sticks scented with laurel (bay leaf), designed for space-cleansing smudge rituals or for bringing a warm, herbal, slightly spiced fragrance into a room.
- Made from natural ingredients — a blend of herbs, plant-based binding materials, and laurel essential oil. No synthetic fragrances or chemical additives.
- Organic and cruelty-free. Not tested on animals.
- The laurel scent is warm, herbaceous, and gently camphoraceous — aromatic and savoury rather than sweet or floral, with a woody depth that lingers after the stick has finished burning.
- Part of the Earth Inspired Smudge Incense range, which offers several fragrance options for different intentions and moods.
The Laurel Leaf
Laurel — Laurus nobilis, commonly known as bay leaf — is one of the oldest ceremonial plants in Western tradition. In ancient Greece, laurel wreaths crowned victors, poets, and scholars. The Oracle at Delphi chewed laurel leaves before delivering prophecies, and the plant was sacred to Apollo, god of light, truth, and healing. In ancient Rome, laurel symbolised triumph and honour. The word "laureate" — as in poet laureate or Nobel laureate — comes directly from the Latin for laurel. Across Mediterranean cultures, bay leaves have been burned for purification, protection, and the invitation of success for thousands of years.
The scent of burning bay laurel is distinctive: warm, herbal, and slightly medicinal, with a peppery, camphoraceous top note and a deeper, woody-sweet base. It is a kitchen-familiar smell (bay leaf is a staple in European cooking) transformed into something more intense and aromatic when burned as incense. For people who find traditional incense scents like sandalwood or patchouli too sweet or heavy, laurel offers an alternative that is grounded, savoury, and immediately recognisable without being exotic.
When to Reach for Laurel
Laurel's traditional associations are with victory, achievement, wisdom, and protection. Burn it before an important meeting, an exam, a creative session, or any moment where you want to feel focused, confident, and mentally sharp. It is also a strong choice for cleansing a workspace — the warm, herbal scent creates an atmosphere that feels purposeful and grounded rather than dreamy or relaxed. Where eucalyptus clears a space with sharp freshness and yagra fills it with warm abundance, laurel centres it — bringing a quiet sense of authority and readiness.
Laurel is also one of the most popular herbs in manifestation and wish-writing practices. Many people write an intention on a bay leaf and burn it as a simple ritual for releasing goals into the world. Using laurel incense carries a similar symbolic energy in a more sustained, ambient form.
How to Use
Light the tip of the stick, let the flame catch for a few seconds, then blow it out so the stick smoulders. Place it in an incense holder on a heat-resistant surface. Burn in a ventilated room with a window open to allow airflow. Each stick burns for approximately 20–30 minutes depending on airflow. Do not leave burning incense unattended. Keep away from curtains, fabrics, and anything flammable.
A Note on Gifting
Laurel incense carries a message of success, achievement, and confidence — making it a particularly fitting gift for someone facing a challenge, starting a new venture, or celebrating an accomplishment. It pairs well with a journal, a candle, or a crystal associated with focus and clarity (such as clear quartz or tiger's eye) for a goal-setting or manifestation gift set. The warm, familiar scent also makes it accessible to people who might find other incense fragrances too unfamiliar or strong.
Common Questions
Is laurel the same as bay leaf?
Yes. Laurel (Laurus nobilis) is the same plant as the bay leaf used in cooking. The essential oil and dried leaf have a more concentrated, aromatic version of that familiar kitchen scent — warm, herbal, slightly peppery, and woody.
What does laurel incense smell like compared to burning an actual bay leaf?
Similar character, but smoother and more sustained. Burning a raw bay leaf produces a short, sharp burst of aromatic smoke. Laurel incense sticks deliver the same scent profile in a slower, more controlled burn over 20–30 minutes, blended with the natural base materials of the stick.
Is laurel a relaxing or energising scent?
Neither strongly. Laurel is a centring, focusing scent — it promotes alertness and clarity without the sharpness of eucalyptus or the brightness of citronella. Think of it as grounding rather than stimulating. It suits work, study, and ritual more than evening wind-down.
How does laurel compare to the other scents in this range?
Eucalyptus is cool and clearing. Citronella is bright and citrusy. Yagra is warm and gently sweet. Laurel is herbal, savoury, and grounding — the most traditionally Western scent in the range, and the one most closely tied to achievement, focus, and purposeful energy.
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