copie de copie de Handcrafted 3D dream catcher with Ethiopian opal and \"Honuwhenua\" turtle

Dreamcatcher 3D wood, opal and turtle

length: 20 +8 cm attachment

diameter: 9 cm

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€50.00 (tax incl.)
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Description

Dreamcatcher 3D wood with abalone and opal

General features:

This dream catcher is a unique creation made with willow wood, Ethiopian opal, abalone turtle, and feathers of rooster, peacock, parrot and revered pheasant.

In its 3D form, it represents the 4 directions.

length: 20 + 8 cm fastening

diameter: 9 cm

It is purified with Native American herbs and consecrated using a Lakota ritual

Tip: if you can, place it where the morning sun gives

you can also purify it once or twice a week with sage

Vertus Opal noble


Noble opal carries all the clear, luminous symbolism of water. White opal conveys the idea of the impermanence of all things: everything is destined to change, including everyday life and the world around us. It is a precious ally in moments of upheaval and instability, helping us not to resist, and by letting ourselves be carried along, it teaches us to suffer less.

A Venusian stone, it encourages inspiration and strengthens the sense of beauty. It opens the mind and soul to the world of art, to creations born purely of human inspiration. It inspires poets and initiates us to wonder at nature and the world.

Turtle totem

The turtle is truly the symbol of Mother Earth. In fact, we live on a continent whose original name is \"the great Turtle Island\". If we look at a map, we see the head at the North Pole, the front legs are Alaska and Quebec, the back legs are Florida and California, and the tail is Mexico.

The turtle refers to the fact of being connected, of being in link with the energy of the great Mother Earth, the Eternal Mother on which our life evolves. In Quebec, we use an anglicism to describe this: being grounded, i.e. having your feet firmly planted on the ground. The turtles two homes are water and land. The tortoise teaches us to put down roots: in order for our ideas to bear fruit, we have to be firmly rooted where we are, in order for the creative pole to bear fruit. It also teaches us how to go with the flow, to flow with the flow of life, without violence or whining, thus avoiding the obstacles that these attitudes create.

People who have the medicine of the tortoise teach us, through their way of life, to take the time to do things, and \"that theres no point in running\". This is reminiscent of the fable \"The Hare and the Tortoise\", where the two animals are in a race, and the hare, moving very fast, thinks he has time and falls asleep, whereas the tortoise moves forward steadily and thus arrives first.

The tortoise evokes balance, the need to think carefully before acting, and also the natural protection we have: to protect itself, the tortoise tucks its legs and head into its shell, which is an eminently peaceful method of defence that teaches us the importance of defining our boundaries clearly. Its a very important task for all beings to define the frameworks within which they want to live, what they accept and what they dont, and to choose the people with whom they will be in contact.

The tortoise teaches us the freedom we must give to our children. Indeed, it lays its eggs and leaves them there, which teaches two things. Firstly, we must see our children as beings in their own right, with wisdom within them. We must listen and watch with discernment, of course, but if they dont experiment at the time, theyll do it later, when its much more dangerous; in this way, they learn more quickly and are grateful to us. And on the other hand, it also evokes the idea of letting things mature, like eggs left in the sand to be warmed by the sun so that they can hatch. In the same way, you have to let the idea mature so that when it is expressed you can achieve the effect you intended.

This is the basic symbolism of the tortoise, one of the most important clans in the nations, one of the best stewards of the earth and who had a highly developed sense of family, in the maternal sense of the word; people of great peace.


A symbol of tenderness in love, it could however be the stone of polyamorous people, the love of the other being through the opal also the love of ones freedom. It leads to a joyful love devoid of possessiveness.

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Product Details
LPDA-REFB-3063

Data sheet

Natural stone
Pyrite

Specific References

MPN
LP00003063DA
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