A thick, hand-finished smudge incense stick that blends Palo Santo wood with Yagra resin — a traditional aromatic known for its warm, slightly sweet, and deeply resinous character. Each pack holds approximately nine sticks made in India from natural ingredients, and the scent sits somewhere between soft citrus and white resin: grounding without being heavy, warm without being cloying.
What You Get From Each Stick
A slow, steady burn that fills a room gradually rather than all at once — well suited to bedrooms, reading corners, and smaller living spaces where you want scent without overwhelm.
A resinous base note layered with a light, almost starchy sweetness that distinguishes Yagra from more familiar frankincense or sandalwood profiles.
A clean burn with no synthetic binders. What you smell is the ingredient blend itself, not added fragrance oil.
Thick, textured sticks with a rough, hand-rolled surface — these look and feel distinctly different from mass-produced incense.
Nature-inspired kraft packaging with diamond-shaped windows so you can see and smell the sticks before lighting the first one.
Natural Ingredients, Made in India
Each stick is crafted from a blend of Palo Santo wood and Yagra resin combined with fragrant herbs and essential oils. The sticks are hand-finished, which gives them an uneven, organic texture — no two look exactly the same. The pack measures approximately 23 x 4.5 x 2 cm and weighs around 39 g, making it easy to tuck into a drawer or keep on a shelf between uses.
Lighting and Burning
Hold the tip of the stick at a slight angle and light it with a match or lighter. Let the flame catch for 10–15 seconds, then gently blow it out so the stick smoulders. Place it in a heat-safe incense holder on a stable surface, away from curtains and anything flammable. The smoke is moderate — enough to carry the scent without filling the room with haze.
If you want a shorter session, you can press the lit end into sand or ash to extinguish it and relight the same stick later. Store unused sticks in a cool, dry place — keeping the pack sealed helps preserve the fragrance over time.
Palo Santo and Yagra
Palo Santo, sometimes called "holy wood," has a long history of use in South American cleansing rituals, where the wood is burned to produce a bright, citrus-tinged smoke. Yagra resin adds a different dimension: deeper, warmer, with a faint sweetness that rounds out the sharper Palo Santo top note. Together they create a layered scent that starts fresh and settles into something more grounding as the stick burns down. People who use smudge incense often light it during evening wind-down routines, before meditation or yoga, or simply when they want to shift the mood of a room.
Size and Quality
Each pack contains roughly nine sticks. Because these are hand-finished rather than machine-extruded, expect slight variation in thickness and length from stick to stick — this is normal and a sign of the handmade process. The packaging uses kraft card with a terracotta-coloured sleeve, and the diamond-shaped cutouts let the product breathe while sitting on a shelf.
A Warm Gift
The presentation is simple and natural-looking, which makes this a thoughtful addition to a housewarming gift, a self-care package, or a stocking filler for someone who appreciates home fragrance. It pairs well with a ceramic incense holder or a small dish of natural crystals.
Common Questions
How many incense sticks come in one pack?
Approximately nine hand-finished smudge sticks per pack.
What does Yagra smudge incense smell like?
The scent is resinous and gently sweet, with a light citrus brightness from the Palo Santo and a warm, starchy depth from the Yagra resin. It is softer and less sharp than pure frankincense.
Can I relight a partially burned incense stick?
Yes. Press the lit tip into sand or ash to put it out, then relight whenever you are ready for another session.
Is this incense suitable for small rooms?
It works well in compact spaces. The smoke output is moderate, so it scents a room without becoming overpowering.
Are smudge incense sticks the same as regular incense sticks?
Smudge sticks tend to be thicker and use coarser, more natural blends than standard thin incense. They produce a heavier, more aromatic smoke and often burn more slowly.