
Incense Dragon's Blood
Incense
by Green Tree
Dragon's Blood Incense by Green Tree
Dragon's blood incense is a hand-rolled natural incense stick made from a blend of flowers, oils, spices, resins and fragrant gums. Green Tree crafts each 15g pack using natural oils and plant-based ingredients, producing a warm, resinous smoke that fills a room in under a minute. If you've been burning synthetic sticks from the supermarket, this is the upgrade you didn't know you needed.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | Green Tree |
| Scent | Dragon's Blood |
| Content | 15g |
| Type | Natural incense sticks |
| Ingredients | Natural oils, flowers, spices, resins, fragrant gums |
| SKU | SM0274 |
Pair these sticks with an incense holder to catch the ash cleanly and keep your surfaces free from burn marks. If you're setting up a meditation space, a few sticks of Palo Santo or Nag Champa incense alongside the Dragon's Blood gives you rotation options so the scent stays interesting session to session.
What Dragon's Blood Incense Actually Smells Like
The first thing you notice when you light a stick is the deep, sweet-resinous base note — somewhere between amber and warm spice, with a slightly earthy finish. It's not floral and it's not sharp. The smoke itself is moderately thick for the first 30 seconds, then settles into a gentle, steady plume. One stick scents a medium-sized room (roughly 15-20 square metres) for about 30-40 minutes. The scent lingers on soft furnishings for a good few hours afterwards, so bear that in mind if you're burning in a bedroom.
Compared to something like Nag Champa, dragon's blood is warmer and less powdery. It lacks the vanilla sweetness of sandalwood incense and instead leans into that deep, almost woody-resinous territory. We'd call it grounding rather than uplifting — which is exactly why it works well as a backdrop for meditation or quiet focus time.
The one honest limitation: at 15g per pack, you're looking at roughly 8-12 sticks depending on thickness. If you burn daily, you'll go through a pack in under two weeks. Worth stocking up if this becomes your go-to.
What Is Dragon's Blood Resin?
Dragon's blood is a deep red plant resin harvested from several tree species, most notably from the genera Croton, Dracaena, and Calamus. The resin has been traded for centuries across Asia, Africa and South America — it turns up in traditional medicine, varnish-making, and ritual practices. According to Healthline, a 2016 clinical trial found that dragon's blood reduced inflammation and aided in wound healing. Research published in BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine also examined its antioxidant properties in vitro (PMC2650746). The resin is rich in flavonoids, according to a 2024 study in PMC (PMC10940652), which directly affect its chemical profile.
When used in incense, the resin is blended with other plant materials and oils rather than burned pure. Green Tree combines it with flowers, spices, and fragrant gums to create a balanced scent profile that doesn't overwhelm a room. The result is a stick that smells like dragon's blood resin without the acrid edge you sometimes get from cheaper blends that rely on synthetic fragrance oils.
Why Burn Dragon's Blood Incense for Meditation?
A consistent scent cue helps your brain shift gears. If you light the same incense every time you sit down to meditate, your nervous system starts associating that smell with stillness. It's a simple conditioning trick, and it works. Dragon's blood incense is particularly well-suited because the scent is steady and warm without being distracting — no sudden sweet spikes or chemical undertones pulling your attention away.
We've had customers tell us they've tried five or six different incense lines before landing on Green Tree's dragon's blood as their daily stick. The consistency batch to batch is solid — you're not gambling on whether this pack smells like the last one. That matters when scent is part of your routine.
One thing to keep in mind: according to research published in PMC (PMC8548258), incense smoke does contain particulates that enter the air. If you're burning indoors, crack a window or leave a door ajar. Good ventilation means you get the scent without the haze building up. This is common sense for any incense, not specific to dragon's blood.
How to Use Dragon's Blood Incense
- Place an incense stick in a holder on a heat-safe surface, away from curtains, paper, and anything flammable. A ceramic or wooden incense tray works best.
- Light the tip of the stick with a match or lighter. Let it flame for 5-10 seconds until the tip glows orange.
- Blow out the flame gently. The stick should produce a thin, steady stream of fragrant smoke from the glowing ember.
- Position the holder in the room where you want the scent. For meditation, place it about 1-2 metres from where you'll be sitting — close enough to smell, far enough that the smoke doesn't drift directly into your face.
- Let the stick burn down completely, or extinguish it early by pressing the glowing tip into sand or a fireproof dish. Store unused sticks in a dry, sealed bag to preserve the fragrance.
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Medical disclaimer. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before use of any substance.






