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Alleged Bat Heart Root | Hoodoo Gambling Luck & Money Curio

Alleged Bat Heart Root | Hoodoo Gambling Luck & Money Curio
Regular price $6.95 USD
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Primary Spiritual Use: Luck
Secondary Spiritual Use: Money
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Spiritualist-Approved Instructions & Product Info ✅

Some curios in the conjure tradition carry names far stranger than the thing itself. Bat Heart Root is one of them: not an animal part at all, but a small botanical root named for its resemblance to a bat's heart, worked for one classic purpose, luck in games of chance. Gamblers, card players, and anyone chasing a lucky streak have long carried it tucked into a mojo bag, a pocket, or a wallet to pull winning fortune their way. It is a small, inexpensive curio with a big reputation in Hoodoo gambling lore, the kind of thing you keep on you when the cards are down and you want luck riding in your corner.

Key Features of Bat Heart Root

A prepared botanical root, not an animal part. Despite the name, this is a plant root, named only for its bat-heart shape. No bats are involved and none are harmed; it is a traditional herbal curio.

A classic gambling-luck curio. Bat Heart Root's documented use in Hoodoo and conjure is luck in games of chance, carried to draw winning fortune at cards, dice, the lottery, and the casino.

Made for the mojo bag. Small enough to tuck into a gris-gris or mojo bag, a pocket, or a wallet, it is built to be carried on you while you play rather than worked on the altar.

Product Details

  • Item: Alleged Bat Heart Root (as labeled), a prepared botanical curio root (named for its shape, not an animal part)
  • Tradition: Hoodoo, conjure, and rootwork
  • Primary uses: Gambling luck and money drawing
  • Best carried in: a mojo or gris-gris bag, pocket, or wallet
  • Sold as a curio for magical and ritual use only

The Spiritual Significance

Bat Heart Root belongs to the gambling-luck branch of Hoodoo and conjure, the body of African American folk magic that gave us a whole shelf of curios for drawing money and winning at games of chance. Its name comes from its shape, a small root said to resemble a bat's heart, and in folk symbolism the bat is a creature of good fortune that finds its way through the dark to what it seeks. The root carries that same association: luck that arrives even when the odds look long.

In practice it sits squarely in the gambler's tradition alongside Lucky Hand root, buckeyes, and lodestones, curios carried for that extra edge at the table. It is most often worked in a mojo or gris-gris bag, fed and kept close while you play, a small, portable charm rather than a candle or an altar piece.

Bat Heart Root is sold strictly as a folk-magic curio. It is not an animal product and makes no health claim of any kind.

How To Use Bat Heart Root

  1. Set your intention for luck. Hold the root and name the win you are working toward: a lucky night at cards, a lottery draw, a turn in your fortune at the tables.
  2. Add it to a mojo bag. Place the root in a gris-gris or mojo bag, traditionally with other luck curios, and keep the bag on you whenever you play.
  3. Carry it close. If you prefer to carry it alone, tuck the root into a pocket, wallet, or the bag you bring to the game, so the luck travels with you.
  4. Feed and renew it. Many rootworkers dress a luck curio with a luck or money oil now and then to keep it working, speaking your intention as you do.
  5. Keep it for play. Reserve the root for your gambling or luck work rather than everyday handling, so it stays dedicated to the job you gave it.

Pairs Well With

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Bat Heart Root made from an actual bat?

No. Despite the name, it is a botanical root, named only for its resemblance to a bat's heart. No bats are used and none are harmed. It is a traditional plant curio, the same kind of evocatively named herb you find throughout Hoodoo and conjure.

What is it traditionally used for?

Luck in games of chance. Bat Heart Root is a gambler's curio, carried to draw winning fortune at cards, dice, the lottery, bingo, and the casino, and worked more broadly for money drawing. It is one of the classic luck roots of the conjure tradition.

How do I carry or use it?

Most often in a mojo or gris-gris bag kept on you while you play, sometimes with other luck curios like a buckeye or Lucky Hand root. You can also carry it alone in a pocket or wallet, and dress it now and then with a luck or money oil.

Which tradition does it come from?

Hoodoo, conjure, and rootwork, the African American folk-magic traditions that hold a deep body of gambling-luck and money-drawing practice. Bat Heart Root sits alongside Lucky Hand root, buckeyes, and lodestones in that gambler's toolkit.

Can a beginner use it?

Yes. It is one of the simplest curios to start with: set your intention, add it to a bag or pocket, and carry it when you play. No special tools or training are needed, though seasoned workers fold it into larger luck and money workings.

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