Incense In The Wind

Burner Burner - Carhartt jacket incense burner

Thursday, 24 August 2023

Himalayan incense - Nepal, Tibet, and Bhutan

 


Nepal and Tibet are two similar regions separated and joined by the Himalayan mountain range - both areas share Mount Everest. Tibet is to the north of the Himalayas, with China to the north and east, and is claimed as part of China, Nepal is an independent country to the south of the Himalayas, with India to the south. Bhutan is a third, similar region, a little to the east of Nepal, between Tibet and India. The peoples in all three regions follow Buddhism. And all three have incense which is termed Himalayan incense. 




Tibetan incense is the most well known and most commonly available of all three countries. It is a long dry stick dhoop style incense made with local herbs and intended more for ritual, spiritual, or health purposes than for aesthetic burning. Incense from Bhutan is very similar. Incense from Nepal can sometimes be dry stick dhoops, though is more frequently "rope" style - powdered ingredients are placed in paper which is then twisted into a rope shape and burned. 


Reviews 

  
Harati Tibetan Incense
Sept 2019 - Score: 35


Bosen Blessing Incense
April 2019 - Score: 35

Jan 2014 - Score: 30 

  
Medicine Buddha Incense from Bhutan (D)
Dec 2024 - Score: 28


Himalayan Rope Incense
Sept 2021 Score: 28


  
Dr. Yonten’s Tibetan Healing Incense
March 2017 - Score: 26


   
  Eyes Of the Lord Buddha
Pancha Buddha Incense Sticks
 (M)
Sept 2023 - Score: 25


Date: Aug 2023  - Score: 25  


   
Dhompatsang Enterprises Peace Incense (D)
Sept 2019 - Score: 21



Boudhanath
Himalayan Rope Incense
Sandalwood

June 2017 - Score: 20


June 2017 - Score: 19


Scents reviewed: 11
High score: 35 
Low score: 19
Average: 27 

***


Wednesday, 23 August 2023

GP Industries Pandhari

 


I had a sample stick of GP Industries Ruh Amber, which I really liked, and discovered that their best known brand is Pandhari, so I bought a pack from an eBay company that was recommended to me on the Reddit incense  forum.   GP Industries are based in the city of Shimoga in Karnataka, and have apparently been in business for 23 years, but I have found little other information. Which is a shame, as going by the Ruh Amber and this Pandhari, they are a decent incense company. It continually surprises me how many decent Indian incense companies there are which us Westerners know nothing about - meanwhile a handful of well known brands predominate.    

This is truly delightful stuff. A soft black masala paste has been hand rolled onto a plain machine cut bamboo splint, and then coated in a fluffy brown wood powder. There is a scent on the powder - though I suspect that is a transference of the essential oil that has been applied to the stick. The oil has a bold perfume reminiscent of a Turkish lemon cologne infused with fresh vanilla and coconut, Fresh, gently manly, musky, sensual, bright, transportive - hugely inviting and compelling. The scent on the burn - as with the best masalas - carries on the scent from the stick, albeit in a softer, more diffused, manner. It doesn't overwhelm, but firmly informs and decorates the room with the incense perfume. It is a surprisingly subtle incense, unfolding gently, and spreading pleasantly around the room and into the house. Yet, we've also used it in the garden while indulging in our hot tube, and it makes itself known even in an open space. 

I'm impressed with this. A lot. It hasn't got me that excited or intrigued enough to go into my top drawer, but it is certainly a heavenly incense that does stand out as something a little bit special. Nice one.  


Date: Aug 2023   Score: 43 
***


Monday, 21 August 2023

Satya (Mumbai) Fortune

 


A Satya incense by Nagraj Setty (the distributor brother) in Mumbai. Produced for the Indian-American distributor R. Expo / Song Of India.  Machine extruded sticks. 

This presents as a perfumed incense. It smells perfumed, and it looks and behaves like a perfumed incense (including the black smoke when the stick is lit). The scent is pleasant, but nothing special. It's slightly woody, slightly musky, kinda generic "perfumed incense". There's not a lot here to get the mind or spirit into. But, it is a pleasant enough incense I'm happy to burn casually in the house.  


Date: Aug 2023    Score:  31 


  


While I said I was happy to burn this incense casually in the house, we actually put it out in the outhouse to keep that space happy and refreshed. The construction and the scent reminds me of foil wrapped incense, which I am fond of, and which seems to be just a British thing.  We have enjoyed this in the outhouse. Certainly more than the average perfumed incense. Score moved up a little. 


Date: Sept 2023   Score:  35 
***


Sunday, 20 August 2023

Blue Pearl Sandalwood

 
Fourth review -  - scroll down for earlier

This is my fourth review of Blue Pearl's Sandalwood, and it's also the fourth stick from the 10 stick Blue Pearl "Classic Champa" sampler which has three Champa styles, plus 7 other fragrances ranging from Amber to Silver Lotus. Described as "Woody, Soft, and Sweet". I seem to be in the mood for the Blue Pearl style of incense at the moment because I've been enjoying all the sticks from the sampler pack so far - though the Golden Champa gave me pause for thought, as it is a rather heady and dry "flora" type of stick; however, to be fair, it was on par for the flora style (but not really in line with other champa style incenses I've had). 

The stick is machine extruded. The cool scent presents as synthetic sandalwood with a cool volatility. Yes, there's an awareness of sandalwood, but it lacks the richness and warmth that I normally get and enjoy with sandalwood. I mean, it's nice. I don't dislike it. But it's more like an everyday sandalwood soap perfume than something which touches my emotions, which a decent sandalwood formulation can do. 

 It burns quite pleasantly. No off-notes. It's quite mild and warm. It's not a great stick, but it's not terrible. Pretty average. I'm OK with burning this as a soft everyday room freshener. Indeed, it's quite nice. I think I was quite harsh when I first reviewed these sticks. 


Date: Feb 2026   Score: 27



Third review

A fresh pack, a fresh year, and perhaps a fresh attitude to these machine-extruded perfumed-charcoal sticks made by a white label incense house in India for the Blue Pearl brand in America. 

The scent on the stick is standard synthetic sandalwood room-freshener fragrance. It's a little sharp and cool, but has a warm woody awareness of sandalwood about it. I'm not offended. I like synthetic sandalwood. But I'm not delighted. I'm just sort of "meh". It's a familiar and unambitious scent. But it is clean and fresh. Ho hum. Onto the burn. 

The scent on the burn is mild, and mildly pleasant. It's not offensive, and it's not smoky. It's on the other side of the room from me, and the scent drifts pleasantly across. It's not a shy scent - it makes itself known, but neither is it rude. I am aware of it without it dominating the moment. There is a sort of soft everyday sandalwood soap scent wafting around. Yes, there is some awareness of smoke and burning within the scent, but it's not actively smoky. It's kind of what you'd expect a cheap, everyday perfumed-charcoal sandalwood incense to smell like. No goal, but no foul. Wiped its face. 


Date: May 2025   Score: 25 



Second review

We've used them up in the outhouse. Our view of them has reduced. They have nothing to commend them, while they are mostly just generic perfumed-incense, too often the smoke is just a tad too much which does make them sub-par. 


Date: Sept 2023   Score: 18



First review

Machine made perfumed-charcoal incense sticks with the brand name Blue Pearl, sold and distributed in the US by Lotus Brands.  Made in India by an unknown manufacturer to help raise money and awareness for the SYDA Foundation

I really liked the Blue Pearl Classic Champa, a masala incense, so thought I would explore more Blue Pearl branded incense, but I've been somewhat disappointed at how ordinary this is. Blue Pearl Sandalwood is a pretty average perfumed incense. There's nothing remarkable about it at all. Bog standard. Doesn't even smell of sandalwood. I mean, it's OK. It's not offensive. But it is just generic perfumed incense to freshen up a room. 


Date: Aug 2023   Score: 23  
***




Note: It is not revealed where Blue Pearl source the incense for their brand; however, a number of the incenses are similar to those made by HMS of Pune.

 

Bimal (BAW) Shree Vitthal Flora Sticks

 


I picked this up from a UK eBay seller, Home-giftSolutions - recommended to me on the Reddit incense forum, which is a useful international resource and place to gather and chat. The eBay seller has imported a selection of 50g packets of rich incense by a variety of little known but traditional Indian manufacturers. The prices include postage, and represent excellent value for money. 

This is a 50g packet of flora style incense - such incense tends to be a richer, fatter, and wetter form of masala, often heavy with fragrance oils.  This is certainly heavy and moist, though is perhaps a little thinner than the average flora/fluxo. 

The scent on the stick is perfumed and volatile with touches of alcohol and fruit and cleaning materials - it is mildly sharp, alert, clean, softly acerbic. It presents to me like a mixture of fruit gin, wax furniture polish, and mouth wash. It's curious and mildly pleasant. More curious than pleasant, though not at all offensive. I could sniff for hours and discover new scent suggestions - chocolate, sandalwood, etc, though I'm not finding it especially compelling nor as interesting as it could be. It's like the scents are just dumped there - they don't actually integrate or contrast in a way that intrigues or delights. Nice though. 

The scent on the burn lacks clarity. It has a warm, smoky presence, not too assertive, but certainly enough to makes itself known and to inform a large room. There are elements in the burn of the scents on the stick, but with little distinction - the scents sort of merge in a homogenised and pleasant whole. I do like it - this is my sort of incense, but the vagueness and lack of clarity means it's not an incense that interests or excites me. It's a lower end decent incense. 

The company, Bimal Agarbatti Works (BAW), is a family business founded in 1979 by Jaswantray Acharya in Rajkot, a large city in the Gujarat region on the west coast of India. They sell a wide range of perfumed and masala incense. They don't appear to have an outlet in the West, though some individuals are selling them on eBay. 


Date: Aug 2023   Score: 34 
***

Saturday, 19 August 2023

Gokula Oud Pure Vietnamese Agarwood Connoisseur

 


I'm clearing away incense that has accumulated on my desk, and I come upon a cellophane packet of Gokula Oud with just two sticks in it. I've either burned the rest of the packet with absolutely no recollection, or someone sent me these two sticks as samples or gifts. If you know who you are, make yourself known so I can say thankyou! 

Gokula is a UK based distributor, Mark, who sources from a variety of places, including from the respected Haridas Madhavdas Sugandhi of Pune, and mainly sells under their own brand name.  The incenses tend to be decent quality at low prices. And they are worth checking out if you're in the UK. 

The sticks are a firm dry brown paste machine extruded onto a hand cut dyed pink bamboo splint. There is a faint vague perfume fragrance on the stick - a little like emulsion paint, wool, stale butter, mineral, church hall chairs, cedarwood, frankincense, and honey. But it's all too vague and faint and somehow subdued and old to be especially interesting. Moderately pleasant.

On the burn this smells like a joint made from fresh marijuana - earthy, herby, very green with notes of nettles and green tea. Very pleasant, though not what I would associate with oud.  

A moderately intriguing and moderately pleasant incense. 


Date: Aug 2023   Score: 28

***
Gokula-incense

The best agarwood incense


Meena Perfumery Meena Supreme

 


As regular readers know, I love Happy Hari's Meena Supreme.  I think I have bought up all remaining packets of Paul Eagle's original Meena Supreme (though there are a number of modern packets of Happy Hari's Meena Supreme, which all claim to be the authentic, which can be bought). As those who are familiar with Happy Hari and the Meena Supreme story know, Paul Eagle got all his incenses from Indian suppliers, details of which he kept to himself, though just before his death he did share his sources with Cory of the currently closed Absolute Bliss (Cory has cancer - folks who would like to support his treatment can donate at GoFundMe). I had been told a little while ago that this Meena Supreme by Meena Perfumery of Bangalore was the source for Paul's Meena Supreme. So when I found a source on eBay, I bought a packet. Sadly that source has dried up, and the Meena Supreme website is down (though details of their products are available on WayBack). Americans can still buy Meena Supreme and other Meena Perfumery products, and these can be imported into the UK from eBay, but at a cost. 

Meena Perfumery belongs to the Kabadi family who say they are a third generation incense company, with the skills of incense making passed down by the grandfather to the father who then passed them on to the present owners. They date the start of family incense making to 1947, though the Meena company itself was founded in 1968. They are based in one of the tangle of streets off Magadi Road, Bangalore, but appear to be closed. 


Happy Hari and Meena Perfumery
side by side

Without a doubt Happy Hari's Meena Supreme is Meena Perfumery's Meena Supreme. Same name, same picture, same scent, same fat fluxo sticks with the bamboo tips dyed green. 

The sticks are composed of a fat, generous, dried hard, black paste crudely hand rolled onto plain hand cut bamboo splints with the tips dyed green, and the whole covered thinly and untidily with a white powder.  I'm used to my Happy Hari Meena Supreme being a dried paste, and I have always assumed this was because of age. But this Meena Perfumery Meena Supreme is also a dried paste. It could mean that the Meena formulation is a dry one - though it could also mean that my Meena packet is an old one.  



The image on the packet is attractive, and appears to be a Mughal style painting of a royal couple - possibly a prince seducing a princess beside a stream - he is pouring her a drink, and is gazing softly at her pert, partly exposed breasts and slim torso. It is rich with colour and soft movement. 

The scent on the stick is heady, beautiful, exotic, and so very Indian. It is the essence of Indian incense. There's the soft sweetness of vanilla, and sambrani, and oud, the woolly warmth of halmaddi, and a comfortable woody base of creamy white sandalwood. It's at once exotic and familiar. It shifts constantly like a shimmering diamond. This is a living, breathing scent - warm, sensual, inviting and mysterious. The gentle sweetness is cut with woodiness and sharp notes - touches of a patchouli musk and a lemon sherbet. It is delightful. 

The scent on the burn is similar, though less sweet, and the mineral notes of the sambrani tend to dominate. It is remarkably well mannered for a fluxo style incense - not too smoky, and not too assertive. It gently though firmly informs the room, and lingers pleasantly and cleanly for a long while afterwards. A damn fine incense. It would be greater if more of the promise of the stick made it into the burn, but as it stands it is a top notch incense. A pleasing sambrani based mix. 

I am giving this the same score as Happy Hari's Meena Supreme as it is exactly the same incense.  


Date: Aug 2023    Score: 44 
***

Flora, Fluxo, and Supreme




Friday, 18 August 2023

Padmini Yellow Rose

 


An everyday perfumed incense. Smells of concrete dust and rain on hot pavements and cold pressed rose petals. Generic perfumed incense smell when burned, leaning in the direction of roses, but not emphatically. Kind of cold and dusty with hints of frozen prawns. Ho hum.  Not offensive, but my main thought is "what's the point?", so this is going straight out to the outhouse to keep the cats company.  


Date: Aug 2023   Score: 21 
***





Sree Vani Little Ganesh

   
Second review. Scroll down for earlier


Proper traditional masala incense from a relatively modern Indian incense company. A Satya sized packet (I use Satya as the template for this size and shape of packet as they are, as far as I'm aware, the first company to use this packet - at least, the first well known and still active company - an incense company that is much copied) of the standard 15g weight. The inner packet is waxed paper with printed design and text in blue ink and some oil stains. All quite retro and beautiful. The packet design includes a printed stamp marked "Export Quality". What that means exactly, I don't know. Is it better or lesser quality than domestic output? Who knows. However, Little Ganesh comes from a "Little God" series, which I suspect is aimed at the Western market (which does like a series, especially one based on Eastern imagery and mythology).  It's possible that the Little God series is targeted at the West, but may also be offered to the domestic market, who may feel that incense aimed at the West would be finer quality because the West is perceived to be wealthier and more refined. I do notice that incense aimed at the domestic market from most incense makers will generally be single scent - Jasmine, Patchouli, etc, rather than blends. But it will be the blends, such as Nag Champa and Flora Fluxo, which become the big sellers. I suspect that the domestic market, in general, are cautious about anything  new and different. And I suppose this is to be expected from such an ancient culture, compared to more modern and progressive cultures. 

Anyhow, I like the look and ambiance of this incense even before I open the waxed inner pouch and the fragrance comes out. And then, when it does come out, I'm kinda lost in pleasure and reminiscence. Sweet, juicy, very fruity. It reminds me of the legendary Spiritual Sky - a profoundly perfumed masala incense sold in the Seventies by the Krishna Temple movement (and not to be confused with any of the cheap, crude imitations which may be currently on offer). There is more than a suggestion of strawberry, which puts me in mind of the beautiful Strawberry Fields, which was my (and quite a few others) favourite  Spiritual Sky incense. This is gorgeous. 

I've burned a few of these sticks quite casually over the past few days, which is what put me in mind to come back and review (or re-review) it. It is an attractive masala scent on the burn. There's a little spice that catches in my thought and puts me in mind of halmaddi, as that is what I tend to experience when halmaddi is used as a perfume fixative. Thankfully (for me) most incense makers these days use more neutral and less aggressive/disruptive fixatives such as gum Arabic. There is that general earthy/woody scent which tends to be present in most traditional masala incense. I like that natural scent, and the ambiance and mood it creates. Though it can limit the overall scent experience - narrowing it, and bringing it back to the earthy/woody scent rather than fragrance of the oils. And this is made worse (for me) when halmaddi is used - it can be difficult to really experience the scent journey of the true fragrance. OK for those who love that earthy/woody/spicy masala scent, and are content to have that scent dominant, with subtle variations from whatever fragrance/essential oils are used. But while I like the general masala scent, I find that it can be a little samey after a while, and so I look for incenses that have bolder or at least more noticeable fragrances above and beyond the base masala scent.  

While this incense does limit the floral/fruit fragrance with a little too much masala scent, and a little too much obvious halmaddi, I still love it. I just wish I could get more, or even just the same amount, of the fragrance on the burn that I get on the stick. But that is a general complaint I have of most incense sticks and cones. And is partly why I am becoming more interested in oil burners, and also in going back to explore pure incense. The fillers needed to make incense sticks and cones detracts too much (for me) from the fragrance oils and perfumes. 


Date: Oct 2024    Score: 40 


First review

Sree Vani's "Little God" series of wet masala incense sticks are suddenly (in 2023) available all over the place. I picked up this Little Ganesh packet from PilgrimBazaar on eBay for £1.50, though it is also sold in Spain for €1.45, and in America for $2.50Sree Vani Perfumery Works are based in Bangalore, were formed in 1983, and sell a wide range of masala and perfumed incense.  

This is a rich, moist incense - fairly close in style and attitude to a flora fluxo, though not quite as fat as the average flora. The scent on the stick is beautiful - rich, heady, floral, with an exquisite and exciting cluster of aromas, though the range, albeit vivid, seems to be fairly narrow - fruity (pineapple, lemon sherbet, raspberries) and floral (jasmine, rose, lavender) with nips of baby oil. The light citric notes in the fruit element keep the scent from being cloying, though I'd welcome something else to expand the experience. The joy and delight in the initial meeting of the scent fades as the stick burns, and the scent becomes familiar - perhaps too familiar. There's little left to discover. But that's really a minor quibble. This is essentially a solid and exquisite scent which does delight. 

I'd be keen to explore some more from Sree Vani (when I reduce my backlog a little.....) 


Date: Aug 2023   Score: 38 
***


Vinason's (VNS) Yellow Champa

 


An attractive burn - somewhat floral with a strong fruit element, some dark fruits, some strawberry, quite sweet. Very pleasant scent notes on the stick. A dry firm paste neatly hand rolled onto a square cut bamboo splint with the tip dyed orange and giving a thin coating of tree bark powder.  A quiet scent on the burn, but moderately pleasant. 

Vinasons do not appear to be imported into the UK, and the company does not export to the UK - which is a shame as they sell 20g packets for $0.68. [2025:  To buy from VNS contact Shreyas Sugandhi at vns@vnsons.com] 

 
Yellow Champa on Vinasons website


I got this stick as a sample from the excellent German online PadmaStore, where the appearance is slightly different in terms of the box design and the sticks themselves.  My sample stick looks more like the stick on Vinasons website. 

  
Yellow Champa on PadmaStore website


On the whole a pleasant everyday incense. 

[2025:] Vinason's Yellow Champa is available from VNS at 55 rupees (47p) for 20g. (If you live outside India, to buy from VNS contact Shreyas Sugandhi at vns@vnsons.com).  A sample pack of 35 different VNS masala incense sticks is available from Padma Store for 25 Euros plus shipping


Date: Aug 2023    Score:  29 
***



Ramakrishna's Natural Handmade Incense Sticks Black Current

 


Pleasant, slightly sharp, fruity incense with a distinct scent of blackcurrant. Quite refreshing. Sticks are crudely rolled with soft dark paste onto a plain machine-cut bamboo splint, and coated in a fine dusting of tree bark powder. The scent on the sticks are dark fruit, slightly sweet, slightly acidic, with rum and tobacco and sweat to add depth and interest. Quite masculine.  The burn is fairly quick and, because of the crude rolling with a variation in thickness of the paste, inconsistent. There is, however, a good presence of the blackcurrant along with herby notes of marijuana. Very pleasant and likeable. 

Long burning. 


Date: Aug 2023   Score: 38 
***


Monday, 14 August 2023

Padmini Vanilla Incense Sticks

 


A pack of  20 everyday perfumed-incense sticks by Padmini; bought from the German online store Aqasha for €1,89. Available at $3.95 from CalmStore in Australia, and at $6.49 from Walmart in the US. 

The scent on the sticks is unmistakable - vanilla! It's a little rough and fake, but it's certainly a vanilla scent. While not a common incense scent, I have come upon it a number of times, mostly in low end perfumed incense, and it can work as a simple room freshener. 

The paste is dark and crumbly, applied by hand onto crude hand cut and undyed bamboo splints, and then finished with a smattering of dry tree bark powder. It's all quite simple and rustic, and there's possibly some charm here that is escaping me as I try to avoid getting splinters from handling the bamboo splints. 

I've burned a few of these over the past few days, and they've not impressed me. The scent on the stick is the best part of the experience. Once lit a lot of the vanilla aroma is lost in the general smell or fog of smoke. There are weird notes of old fish and school glue among the general light fog of burning garden waste.  Not a great incense. However, there is over time a general impression of foggy vanilla in the room, so not necessarily evil.  We'll be using the remainder of these in the outhouse. 


Date: Aug 2023   Score: 22 

***