The Incense Hunter

Photos used in reviews are taken by me, sometimes supported by promotional photos. Some illustrative images on general pages may be AI-generated or AI-assisted.

Friday, 5 June 2026

AliExpress Nha Trang Agarwood



Gift from Irene of Rauchfahne, who was exploring incense from AliExpress around the same time I was exploring incense from Temu. The platforms are similar, often sourcing from the same place, though the public perception is that AliExpress is more expensive, slower,  has poorer customer service, and has not completely eliminated counterfeits from its system - all of which is supported by research; while Temu has more public perception issues regarding non-compliance with the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. These concerns don't have hard evidence and the reports come from the US government which sees China as an enemy, yet it would be more reassuring if Temu applied themselves further in checking the sources of all their goods. It's uncomfortable to think that we could be buying incense made by slave  labour. 

I've reviewed a Nha Trang Agarwood - bought from Temu, which I liked. I've reviewed at least 25 incenses which have agarwood in the name, though I've not yet reviewed a piece of agarwood, nor do I know how much or genuinely what sort of agarwood is contained in any of the incenses I've reviewed so far. The one I loved most, Calmveda Oudh Agarwood, was clearly powered by modern aroma chemicals and possibly informed by some low cost oils, such as patchouli, yet really worked for me. 

Nha Trang is a place in Vietnam where old or wild agarwood is legendary, rare, and expensive.  These days agarwood is grown in plantations in Nha Trang, and artificially inoculated, as indicated in this video. The agarwood from these plantations is harvested young, so does not have the qualities of the old Nha Trang agarwood, even though sold under the same name. If there's any genuine agarwood in this incense, it is more likely to be inoculated agarwood rather than the legendary wild wood. 

In my experience the Chinese wrap the fragrance inside the wood paste dough, so it is locked in, and don't tend to spray the finished sticks with a cold throw scent. So there's little clue as to what it will smell like until burned. 

Because wood paste has a strong and distinctive smell when burned, it is generally even more important to place wood paste incense further away when burning so the heavier off-scents of wood paste and binder drop away to allow the lighter fragrance notes to arrive unencumbered. With an incense that is based on wood scent then both base material scent and fragrance material scent tend to arrive wrapped together. The scent is warm, slightly reminiscent of smouldering paper, though also has a general awareness of mildly fragrant wood, though quite clean, pale wood, without the rich, sexy, sweet dark depths that I enjoy.   


Date: June 2026   Score: 25/50
***

Agarwood Incense



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