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Eggshell Powder for Protection

I wanted to share with you one of my favorite magical ingredients, which I’ve always referred to as shell powder, or at least that’s what I called it when I started making it nigh on thirty years ago, and the habit done stuck. However, since that time I’ve learned that people who practice hoodoo, Santeria, conjure, and a number of other ATR magical systems use something similar, but it’s called cascarilla powder. Since I’m not a practitioner of those traditions and don’t feel entitled to use the word, for me, it’s just plain ol’ shell powder.

That said, shell powder is stupid easy to get your hands on. YOU CAN MAKE IT IN YOUR KITCHEN YOU GUYS. In addition to being super easy to make, it’s also handily versatile, and can be incorporated into multiple magical workings of various types for protection, cleansing, and purification. You can certainly buy some at your local botanica or conjure shop—and should absolutely support local businesses when you need to buy some!—but for me, the act of finding/saving/drying/powdering the shells is part of the magical process or making my powder.

Did I mention it’s ridiculously easy?

Shell powder – super easy and useful!

There’s a ton of great info on cascarilla out there on the Interwebz, so I’m not going to reinvent the wheel, but there are a couple of key points you should know.

As I mentioned, cascarilla powder has roots in the West African diaspora. The folks over at Original Botanica have a great explanation of how it evolved from a plant-based item into one derived from eggshells.

“Among other beliefs, the people of this region brought to the New World the concept of sacred white earth they called efun. They believed this substance could provide an individual with protection against evil. Cut off from their ancestral lands, they sought an alternative that could achieve the same effects. This came in the form of an herbal powder called cascarilla. The finely ground outer bark of this large, tropical shrub was already known among the Caribbean natives for its medicinal properties that included reducing fevers, operating as an expectorant, and even clearing flatulence. In fact, the word cascarilla refers to any kind of outer skin or husk. Cascarilla also happened to possess a nearly white color. Over time, Santeria practitioners transitioned from using this herbal powder to using crushed egg shells. These were easier to come by, and the symbolism of the life-giving egg also made it very attractive.”

Magical Properties

Eggs themselves have a number of magical applications—they’re signs of fertility, life, transformation, and so forth. So, how does the shell translate into protection and purification? Well, look at it this way. If the shell is the barrier between the inside of the egg and the entire outside world, why can’t it create a barrier between you/your stuff/your property and all the things you don’t want to get in?

Essentially, it creates a shell that negative energy can’t pass through, just like any other sort of protection magic does.

Basic Shell Powder Recipe

To make your own shell powder, you’ll need (wait for it) eggshells. Certainly, you can use shells from eggs you are baking and cooking with.

Rogue goose eggshells come in handy for shell powder!

If you can find empty eggshells in the wild, that’s an awesome alternative. I actually like to collect the empty shells from the goose eggs near a local pond in the spring. Why, you may ask? Because geese are territorial as hell – one actually chased me last week when I got too close to the nest – and that makes their eggshells perfect for a wee bit of home protection magic.

Regardless, collect your eggshells, and rinse them out (if you find them in the wild, there may be goop inside them, so consider yourself warned). Once they’re clean on the inside, you need to dry them. I generally put them in the oven at a low temp – maybe 300° – for about 15-20 minutes. You want them to be dry and brittle, but not burned.

Once they’re dried out, let them cool, and add them to your mortar and pestle to grind up until you’ve got powder. Yes, you can do this in a coffee grinder if you want, but I genuinely like the meditative aspect of the grinding process by hand.

To use it, sprinkle the powder around whatever it is you want to protect or purify. You can also use it to dress a candle, add to a mojo bag, or blend it in with other magical ingredients for an added bit of oomph.

Shell Powder Chalk

Once you’ve made shell powder, you can also make chalk – and I love this, because then you can DRAW things with it! Protection symbols and whatnot on your sidewalk, walls, doors, etc. To make chalk, you’ll need to start with some of the above shell powder. You’ll need one part hot water, one part white flour, and three parts shell powder (a part is whatever you want it to be – teaspoons, cups, gallons, have at it!).

Combine the hot water and the flour together and mix them thoroughly, and then mix in the shell powder. Mix it until you’ve got a thick, sticky paste – it’s not unlike Sculpy clay when it’s done. If it’s too wet, add more powder, and if it’s too dry, add more water. Shape your shell paste into sticks or chunks, and then wrap them up tightly in a paper towel for a few days. By the end of a week, they should be completely dry.

Another option, if you’re not sure about your chalk rolling abilities, is to gather some of those little white paper condiment cups from your local fast food joint. Pack the cup tightly with the shell paste, wrap in a paper towel, and once it’s dried out, just peel the paper cup away.

Other options? Add dried herbs or magical oils for a variety of purposes, and use that stuff to draw all over the place. It’s so simple to make, with stuff you already have in your house, and it’s going to come in handy, so get crackin’!

7 Comments

  • Zora

    But isn’t it cultural appropriation to even use eggshell powder in the first place? I made a batch but found out that we cannot use it.

    • pattiwigington.com

      Zora, that’s an excellent question, and I always think it’s important to be mindful of cultural appropriation – but not all things are cultural appropriation. Here’s what I mean:

      If I had said “Here’s how to make cascarilla powder, which is used in Hoodoo, Santeria, and African Traditional Religions, and here are some Hoodoo symbols you can draw with the chalk!” then that’s a problem. I’m a white lady with European ancestry, not initiated into any Hoodoo or Santeria practices, I don’t practice an ATR, and I have no rights to claim their traditions as my own, as I mentioned in the first paragraph.

      So, should I create a shell powder, name it something I’m not entitled to, and colonize the practice? Absolutely not – that’s definitely cultural appropriation and it’s a big problem in the spiritual community. It’s akin to if I decided to host a sweat lodge in my back yard, talking about how I was holding a Native American ritual… I’m not Native American and shouldn’t be stealing their practices to use as my own just because I feel like it.

      However – and this is the important part – when it comes to eggs and their shells, there are similar traditions found all over the world. Eggs are seen as powerful barriers in the folk magic of many cultures. Not only that, they can be associated with protection no matter what culture you’re from, because have you ever tried to take an egg from the nest of an angry goose? It’s a bad decision – those things are territorial and will protect their eggs at any cost.

      Using that logic, if we look at magical associations, then eggshells – in any form – can be used for protection, by anyone. Ground up shells can be found anywhere. Chalk is made and used all over – and rest assured, when I make protective markings with my chalk, they’re not symbols taken from other cultures, they’re very much my own.

      Eggshells being symbols of protection are found, among other places, in Appalachian folk magic – I not only live in northern Appalachia but have ancestry here stretching back over two centuries. It’s present in parts of Eastern Europe, ancient Rome, and other places. If the use of eggs, their shells, and the powder was limited to one culture, then yes, this would be cultural appropriation. But eggs and their symbolism are found the world over.

      So when it comes to cultural appropriation, the questions we each have to ask ourselves are: Is this a practice only used or owned by a group I’m not a part of, and if so, should I even be using it? Or is it a practice found in many cultures – including that of my own ancestors – and am I using it in a way that’s respectful and doesn’t steal from oppressed people?

      One last thought – I’d gently suggest being mindful of phrases like “we can’t use it,” because “we” means different things to different people. There are readers here of a wide and diverse collection of backgrounds, and one person’s “we” might not be the same as another’s – just something to consider.

      Thank you so much for the thoughtful and fair discussion question – I hope my answer makes sense!

  • Mama V

    A Lakota medicine man once said something to me that clarified the issue of cultural misappropriation for me. I burn a lot of sage so I asked him if it was cultural appropriation to use sage. He said “you can burn sage. Anyone can. But you cannot smudge or call it smudging if you are not indigenous.” Hope that helps.

    • Kim Caswell

      Love your explanation of that! Perfectly said, I appreciate you. I’ve been dealing with that for years, I am very careful, though I am indigenous, and also a hereditary witch, so I’m all mixed up..lol! Good day!

  • Skye

    If someone sent u something bad and put up protections to protect them from u sending it back can egg shells break down that protection

  • Michelle

    Genuine question. If you won’t use ‘cascarilla’ because the word comes from a closed practice, why do you use ‘mojo bag’ which comes from the same closed practice – Hoodoo ?

  • Dee

    I’ve read on another post that cascarilla powder is actually from a plant & not egg shells, but ground egg shells are added to it in other practices.

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Patti Wigington