Barn Swallow Charcuterie Board
Serve cheese and crackers, meats and other appetizers on this flat ceramic board featuring three barn swallows. It has a hole for easy gripping. It was made in the age-old majolica tradition from Spain, using red clay, white glaze and hand painted colored glaze on top.
Length: 13-3/4”
Width: 8-1/4”
Height: 1/4”
Barn swallows are good to have around. They primarily eat insects, especially the ones that humans consider to be pests—mosquitos, gnats and flying termites. A single barn swallow can consume up to 60 insects per hour or 850 per day! They nest in meadows as well as barns and other structures, usually returning to the same nest year after year. To attract them to your yard, add moving water—a bird bath fountain, bubbler or mister.
Serve cheese and crackers, meats and other appetizers on this flat ceramic board featuring three barn swallows. It has a hole for easy gripping. It was made in the age-old majolica tradition from Spain, using red clay, white glaze and hand painted colored glaze on top.
Length: 13-3/4”
Width: 8-1/4”
Height: 1/4”
Barn swallows are good to have around. They primarily eat insects, especially the ones that humans consider to be pests—mosquitos, gnats and flying termites. A single barn swallow can consume up to 60 insects per hour or 850 per day! They nest in meadows as well as barns and other structures, usually returning to the same nest year after year. To attract them to your yard, add moving water—a bird bath fountain, bubbler or mister.
Serve cheese and crackers, meats and other appetizers on this flat ceramic board featuring three barn swallows. It has a hole for easy gripping. It was made in the age-old majolica tradition from Spain, using red clay, white glaze and hand painted colored glaze on top.
Length: 13-3/4”
Width: 8-1/4”
Height: 1/4”
Barn swallows are good to have around. They primarily eat insects, especially the ones that humans consider to be pests—mosquitos, gnats and flying termites. A single barn swallow can consume up to 60 insects per hour or 850 per day! They nest in meadows as well as barns and other structures, usually returning to the same nest year after year. To attract them to your yard, add moving water—a bird bath fountain, bubbler or mister.