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Whole Cloves (Syzygium aromaticum), 1 Lb

Whole Cloves (Syzygium aromaticum), 1 Lb
Regular price $49.95 USD
Regular price Sale price $49.95 USD
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Primary Spiritual Use: Money
Secondary Spiritual Use: Protection
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Spiritualist-Approved Instructions & Product Info ✅

A clove is a flower that never opened: the dried, unopened bud of the clove tree, shaped so much like a little nail that nearly every language named it one, clavus in Latin, clou in French. Native to the Maluku Islands of Indonesia, the original Spice Islands, and grown today in Madagascar's great harvests, cloves earned their place in folk magic the old way: by being precious, fragrant, and fierce. This is the herb that stops gossip.

This pound of whole buds is the working supply: gossip-stopping incense by the dish, pomanders by the basketful, and money sachets for the circle, the shop shelf, and the household that charms generously.

Key Features of These Whole Cloves

Whole Syzygium aromaticum buds by the pound. Cloves hold their potency in whole form far longer than ground, releasing their warm, woody strength only when crushed for the working at hand.

The gossip-stopper of folk practice. Cunningham seats clove under Jupiter and Fire with the powers of protection, exorcism, love, and money, and the signature working is the famous one: cloves burned to silence ill-speakers, stop gossip, and draw riches to the house.

The working pound. Bulk weight for the deep prosperity shelf; smaller jars start at the 1 oz and 2 oz sizes.

Product Details

  • Botanical name: Syzygium aromaticum (clove)
  • Form: whole dried flower buds
  • Weight: 1 Lb (16 oz)
  • Origin: native to the Maluku Islands of Indonesia; grown today in Madagascar and beyond
  • Scent: warm, woody, and strongly fragrant
  • For spiritual use only; not packaged or sold as a food product
  • Store sealed, away from heat and moisture

The Spiritual Significance

Few jars on the shelf carry more history per pinch. Cloves are the unopened flower buds of an evergreen native to a handful of tiny Indonesian islands, and for centuries those islands were the only place on Earth they grew, which made cloves worth more than gold by weight and set empires sailing to control them. The bud's nail shape named it in language after language, and the nail lore runs through its magic too: cloves pin things down, fix intentions in place, and nail shut the mouths of those who speak against you.

That last working is clove's signature. Across folk practice, cloves are burned to stop gossip and slander and to draw riches to the household, and Cunningham's herbal seats the bud under Jupiter and Fire with protection, exorcism, love, and money among its powers. The pomander carries the protective thread into the winter calendar: an orange studded thick with cloves, ribboned and hung, the centuries-old European charm of blessing and protection that still scents December. Carried whole, cloves draw friendship and comfort; crushed into sachets, they add warmth to love and money work alike. A pound puts the whole repertoire on tap.

How To Use Whole Cloves

  1. Burn the gossip-stopper. Crush a few buds and burn them over charcoal in a fire-safe dish, naming the talk to be silenced and the peace to take its place.
  2. Stud the pomanders by the basket. Press cloves into oranges in rings or sigils, ribbon them, and hang them at every threshold; a pound dresses the whole season, with gifts to spare.
  3. Feed the money sachets. A pinch of crushed clove among your money-drawing herbs adds Jupiter's expansive pull, batch after batch.
  4. Warm the love work. A bud or two in a love sachet brings the warmth-and-comfort thread rather than fire.
  5. Decant and store. Keep a small working jar handy and the pound sealed away from heat and moisture; whole buds hold their strength for years.

Pairs Well With

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are they called cloves?

For the nail they resemble: clavus in Latin, clou in French, and the English word followed. The nail shape carries into the magic, pinning intentions in place and nailing gossip shut.

Can I cook with these?

No. These buds are packaged for spiritual use in incense, sachets, and charms, and are not sold as a food product. Food-grade cloves live at every grocer; keep the ritual jar and the spice rack separate.

How does the gossip-stopping working go?

The classic form is simple: crush a few cloves, burn them over charcoal, and name the talk you want silenced as the smoke rises. Some practitioners add a written name folded under the dish; the bud's nail nature does the fixing.

Who needs a whole pound?

The generous: circle leaders blending sachets by the batch, households that pomander every door each winter, and shops stocking the prosperity shelf. Decant a working jar and keep the rest sealed.

What are clove's correspondences?

Cunningham's herbal places clove under Jupiter and the element of Fire, with protection, exorcism, love, and money among its powers, the expansive planet and the quick element, fitting for a bud that draws and defends at once.

How long do whole cloves keep?

Years, stored sealed away from heat and moisture, and far longer than ground clove. Crush only what the working needs and the pound stays potent through many seasons.

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