For millions of years, rainwater seeps in and slowly erodes the porous limestone, carving deep karst formations into the earth's core. Drop by drop, sediments accumulate, giving rise to irregular mineral formations. Stalactites and stalagmites reach towards each other, patient, certain that one day they will join.
No light penetrates these caverns. Yet, life has found its way there.
Long ago, a family of olms, aquatic salamanders, ventured into these limestone caves and never returned. Generations spent in darkness have stripped them of all color and sight. Pale and blind, they wait motionless, sometimes for years, for the underground river to bring them a few larvae or crustaceans in its murky water.
Close your eyes and let Olm guide you into the heart of a sensory cavern. Aromatic molecules float in cool mineral water, flowing down walls of damp limestone, shimmering with algae and amber. Gradually, nuances of earthy sandalwood and deep musks emerge, like an invisible presence.
Olm doesn't look at himself.
Olm is making its presence felt.
A unique, almost primal scent that awakens something deeply buried within you.