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Dragon's Blood Ritual Bath, 16 oz
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Some spiritual work happens at the altar. Some happens with the body in it. A ritual bath is the second kind, the work where you immerse what you carry, both the spirit and the skin, in water that has been prepared with intent. Dragon's blood bath is one of the older preparations in hoodoo tradition, used by practitioners to wash away crossed conditions, jinxes, and lingering negativity, and to set a strong protective seal around the bather before they step out into the world.
The deep red comes from dragon's blood essence in a traditional bath formulation. The 16 oz bottle gives you supply for a weekly bath, a course of baths over several days, or whatever rhythm your practice calls for. This is the working form for cleansing the whole self, not just the working space.
Key Features of Dragon's Blood Bath
Traditional hoodoo cleansing bath. A red ritual wash in the conjure-supply tradition, used to clear crossed conditions, lift jinxes, and seal the bather in dragon's blood's well-known protective force. 16 oz is enough for many baths.
The bath-form companion to the ink and resin. Same essence as the dragon's blood you would burn or write with, in the form you immerse yourself in. Practitioners who keep dragon's blood across multiple workings often keep this bath as the form for cleansing the body and aura.
Built for routine practice. Many practitioners take a dragon's blood bath weekly, before significant rituals, after stressful interactions or contact with someone difficult, or as a course of three or seven consecutive baths when a deeper clearing is called for. The 16 oz size supports that rhythm.
Product Details
- Volume: 16 fluid ounces
- Format: liquid bath concentrate to add to bathwater
- Use: topical only; not for drinking
- Source: prepared by Plentiful Earth as part of the in-house ritual-supply line
- Foundation: traditional bath formulation with dragon's blood essence
- Pairs with: charcoal-burned resin, written petitions, protection candles, and Florida Water as a finishing splash
Ingredients
Traditional bath formulation with dragon's blood essence as the foundation. Exact recipe is proprietary to Plentiful Earth. Topical use only; not for ingestion.
The Spiritual Significance
The ritual bath is one of the oldest tools in hoodoo and the wider folk-magic traditions, and it sits at the center of cleansing and uncrossing practice. A practitioner draws a bath, adds the prepared wash, says or thinks the work the bath is meant to do, and immerses themselves so the water carries the intention into and across every part of the body. Dragon's blood bath is the version of this work that reaches for dragon's blood's particular force: a wash that clears, protects, and amplifies in one go.
Dragon's blood as a resin has been used across cultures for thousands of years for protection, purification, and pushing back against harm. In the hoodoo tradition that took shape across the American South in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, dragon's blood became one of the most-relied-on ingredients for the heavy clearing work: the bath you take when you suspect someone has worked against you, the bath you take before a major working of your own, the bath you take to begin a new chapter and put what came before behind you. This wash brings that tradition into your tub.
How To Use Dragon's Blood Bath
- Cleanse the tub physically first. A clean tub before a ritual bath is part of the working, not separate from it.
- Run a warm bath. Hot enough to be comfortable, not hotter than you would use day to day. Pour in a modest amount of dragon's blood bath; half a capful to one capful is enough for most baths.
- Step in, immerse to the shoulders, and stay for ten to twenty minutes. Speak or hold the working in mind: what you are clearing, what you are protecting. Many practitioners pour the bathwater over their head a final time before standing.
- Drain the bath. Air dry if you can, or pat gently. Some traditions hold that you should let the bathwater take what it carried away and not return it to your skin by rubbing.
- Seal the working. A splash of Florida Water, a lit protection candle, or a moment in dragon's blood resin smoke all close a bath ritual well.
A bath like this is not a chore. It is a working. Treat it accordingly and the bath will treat you.
Pairs Well With
- Florida Water Cologne Spray, 12 oz: the traditional finishing splash after a hoodoo ritual bath. A few sprays on the body or in the air seals the bath's protective work as you step back into the day.
- Dragon's Blood Ink by Espiritu: the same essence in written form. Some practitioners write the name of what they are clearing or warding against on paper before the bath, then burn the paper after stepping out.
- Consecrated Dragon's Blood Resin Pieces and Powder Mix: the same essence in burning form. Burn a piece on charcoal in the bathroom during the bath so the smoke and the wash work together.
- Black 6" Household Candle: a traditional banishing candle. Light one before or after the bath to give the cleansed and crossed-off energy somewhere to go.
- Spiritual Cleansings and Psychic Defenses by Robert Laremy: a practical guide to cleansing and protection work for practitioners who want to deepen their bath practice with the wider context of conjure-tradition cleansing.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between dragon's blood bath and the dragon's blood resin or ink?
Same essence, different working form. The bath is for cleansing the body, aura, and spirit through immersion. The resin is for burning or dressing candles and petitions. The ink is for writing your working onto paper. Many practitioners keep all three and reach for whichever the moment calls for.
Is this bath safe for everyday use?
Dragon's blood bath is meant for ritual use rather than daily bathing. Most practitioners take one weekly, before major workings, or as a course of three or seven consecutive baths when a deeper clearing is called for. Treat it as ritual practice, and let your skin and your spirit have rest days between.
Can a beginner take a dragon's blood bath?
Yes. The simplest version is also the most traditional: cleanse the tub, draw the bath, add a measure of the wash, immerse with clear intent, drain the water, dry, and seal. Skill grows with practice, but a clear intent and a respectful approach are most of what the working asks for.
Should I rinse with plain water afterward?
Tradition varies. Some practitioners rinse the working off with clean water before stepping out to mark the close of the bath. Others let the water from the ritual bath be the last water on their skin and air dry. Either approach is defensible; choose what fits your tradition and intention.
How should I store the bottle?
Keep the cap tightly closed and store the bottle in a cool, dark spot away from direct sunlight. The wash keeps well for a long time stored this way. If you notice settling, give the bottle a gentle shake before pouring.
Can I use this bath alongside other spiritual workings?
Yes, and many practitioners do. A dragon's blood bath is often the opening move in a larger working: clear yourself first, then light the candle, write the petition, or sit at the altar. The bath sets the conditions for everything that follows to land cleanly.

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