Omapeleki Brandberg Self-Healed Smoky Negative Manifestation Enhydro
- Regular Price
- £69.00
- Sale Price
- £69.00
- Regular Price
- Unit Price
- per
Ethically hand-mined Brandberg Quartz
62mm ~ 2 1/2" ~ 53 grams
Omapeleki Brandbergs are rare because they are only found in a very remote region of the Brandberg range. To access this area, the miner has to walk at least two days to and from the dig, carrying food, water, and, on the return, crystals. That is the closest any vehicle can get. They are the brightest of all Brandbergs and uniquely energetic.
This ancient-looking smoky is far from ordinary. The ancient geology of the Brandberg range, around 125 million years old, gives self-healing the time to complete in a way seldom seen in other locations and this crystal is an excellent example with both tips being totally re-created by healing.
There are crystal-shaped water pockets (the rare negative manifestation formation), and two easily seen moving bubbles in regular water pockets. One, in the centre of the crystal, is especially large and turning the crystal allows the bubble to trace out this water cavity.
Negatives resemble the internal crystals of the 'ordinary' manifestation formation, but are actually crystal-shaped water pockets. They possess the properties of manifestation crystals, enhydros and their own, little-understood properties. This lack of information is largely due to their rarity. This unusual geometry represents a world within a world.
"The Manifestation Quartz Crystal can be recognised as a small crystal totally enclosed within a larger crystal. These crystals are quite rare. These crystals can also be used [as well as in manifestation] to facilitate artistic creativity, creative thinking, agricultural pursuits, and to increase or decrease [dependent upon the direction of the energy] any aspect of one's life.” Melody, Love is in the Earth.
Kacha Stones is the original ethically mined crystal shop, trading since 1996. Ethical sourcing is important not only for the environment and mining communities, but also for preserving the crystal's energy. Blasting a hole in the earth and collecting the remains does not produce the best crystals.
Nearly all crystal shops now claim their crystals are 'ethically mined', but you only know where and how it was mined if you buy from the miners. For 30 years, we have worked directly with miners from the icy slopes of the Himalayas to the arid deserts of Namibia.