Smoke becomes part of the ritual with these Palo Santo backflow incense cones, made for a dedicated backflow burner. Once lit, the cooled smoke sinks through the cone and rolls downward in soft, slow curls, turning fragrance into a small piece of moving sculpture.
The downward smoke effect
The cone is shaped for backflow use, so the smoke falls rather than rising like standard incense.
On the right burner, it gathers into streams and pools, giving a waterfall-like movement to watch.
This is incense with a visual centre, suited to a quiet shelf, meditation space, or evening wind-down.
Low light makes the falling smoke easier to see, especially against a dark ceramic or stone-style burner.
Standard solid cones will not create the same cascade, as they do not have the hollow channel needed for backflow.
Palo Santo scent and incense base
The fragrance is Palo Santo, a warm, woody scent often chosen for slow rituals and reflective spaces.
Lighting your backflow cone
Place the cone on a dedicated backflow burner, aligning the hollow base with the burner opening. Light the tip, let it catch, then gently blow out the flame so the cone smoulders.
Keep it away from draughts, as moving air will disturb the downward smoke. Use on a heat-safe surface, never leave burning incense unattended, and allow ash and residue to cool before cleaning the burner.
Backflow incense in context
Backflow incense is a modern development of cone incense, designed as much for the eye as for the room. The hollow channel helps the cooled, denser smoke sink through the burner. Palo Santo is widely associated with ritual and contemplative spaces, especially where people want a woody scent to mark a pause in the day. This is not background incense to forget about. It asks to be watched for a few minutes.
Pack details
This pack contains 10 Palo Santo backflow incense cones from the Aromatica Backflow Incense Cones range. They are made in India and intended for use with a suitable…
region of manufacture: India