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Kuripe Pipe of Palo Sangre Wood - Jaguar is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.

Kuripe blowpipe made of Palo Sangre Wood; used for self-administering rapé medicine. Handmade of high-quality Palo Sangre Wood also known as Bloodwood due to its dark red color and red sap. Palo Sangre wood is traditionally used to make ceremonial pipes for shamanic practices. Both ends have been sanded and smoothed for comfort, and the insides have been widened for the most efficient powder medicine delivery. Hand-made so no two are exactly alike having minor cosmetic variations in the wood and the ornamentation that will not affect the purpose of medicine application. Rapé is a sacred and powerful (and legal) medicine originating in Brazil and Peru, used for healing and cleansing. It is made from various Amazonian medicinal plants, trees, seeds, and vines, and most often Mapacho tobacco. One administers it by blowing it through a Kuripe into each nostril. In some traditions, rapé is used in conjunction with Ayahuasca or San Pedro during ceremony to help with grounding, blockages or to aid in purging.
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Rapé is a sacred shamanic medicine that has been used by healers of the Amazon basin for thousands of years and has become an essential part of their tribal culture and history. Rapé is a complex blend of pulverized plants, which usually contain a strong tobacco, Nicotiana rustica and sometimes also Nicotiana tabacum, as one of the main ingredients. Given the potency of the tobacco, Nicotiana rustica, which is 20 times stronger than Nicotiana tabacum, rapé can elicit mind alerting effects (Stanfill et al. 2010). South American shamans use tobacco as a sacred, wholesome medicine and there exists a very close connection between tobacco use and shamanism that has little in common with our western way of tobacco use. Indigenous tribes use tobacco in ceremonies, to predict good weather, fishing, or harvest, and for spiritual and curing purposes such as vision quests, trances, etc., (Wilbert 1987), but rarely for smoking. The use of tobacco by indigenous tribes in South America, such as the Kaxinawá, Nu-nu, Yawanawá, and Katukina, is profoundly entrenched in their culture, and has been employed at least since the Mayan civilization for ritual, medicinal and recreational purposes (Zagorevski and Loughmiller-Newman, 2012). In addition to tobacco, rapé preparations often contain pulverized and sieved leaves mixed with finely ground plant materials or alkaline ashes, e.g. camphor, cinnamon, tonka bean, clover, banana peel, and mint (Cardoso and Nascimento, 2008; Stanfill et al. 2015). The rapé ashes can, in addition, be made from psychoactive plants (McKenna, 1993). There exist special rapé preparations that contain hallucinogens, made for ceremonial and curing purposes. However, some rapé ingredients will always remain a secret of the shamanic tribe that composed it. Source: https://katukina.com/doc/rape
Abelardo & Luzmarina Mirano
| Size | 3" L x 1.25" H |
Kuripe Pipe of Palo Sangre Wood - Jaguar is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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