4.5
(256)
15,547
자전거 타는 사람
42
라이딩
As rotas de ciclismo de turismo em torno de Barrettali caracterizam-se pelo terreno acidentado do Cap Corse, com litorais dramáticos, estradas sinuosas e um interior montanhoso. A região apresenta paisagens variadas, desde caminhos costeiros cénicos com vistas para o mar a rotas que atravessam colinas e passam por aldeias pitorescas. As elevações podem ser significativas, oferecendo subidas desafiadoras e vistas recompensadoras sobre o Mediterrâneo. A área inclui falésias íngremes e densa vegetação de maquis, com destaques como a Marine de…
마지막 업데이트: 4월 6, 2026
5.0
(3)
353
자전거 타는 사람
29.3km
02:26
770m
770m
어려운 자전거 타기. 우수한 체력 필요. 대부분 포장된 지면. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 갈 수 있음.
5.0
(11)
1,682
자전거 타는 사람
64.6km
04:45
1,500m
1,500m
어려운 자전거 타기. 우수한 체력 필요. 대부분 포장된 지면. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 갈 수 있음.
무료 회원 가입
5.0
(1)
37
자전거 타는 사람
21.2km
01:38
520m
520m
어려운 자전거 타기. 우수한 체력 필요. 대부분 포장된 지면. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 갈 수 있음.
4
자전거 타는 사람
9.35km
00:53
330m
330m
어려운 자전거 타기. 좋은 체력 필요. 투어 중 자전거를 끌고 가야 하는 구간이 있을 수 있음.
더 다양한 경로와 다른 탐험가들의 추천을 살펴보세요.
무료 회원 가입
이미 komoot 계정이 있나요?
투어 추천은 다른 사람들이 komoot에서 완료한 수천 개의 활동을 바탕으로 구성되어 있습니다.
오늘 무료 계정으로 시작하세요
다음 모험이 기다리고 있어요.
로그인 또는 가입하기
바레탈리 주변 인기 장소
Tabac-Presse, café, bar, petrol station and restaurant - everything is here. The terrace is inviting and comfortable, you sit in the shade of the trees with a view of the sea. The food was freshly prepared, homemade and very tasty and the owners were very friendly.
0
0
Doomed to eternity: In one of the most beautiful spots in Corsica, the ruins of the Canari asbestos mine remind us of man's obsession with making things possible. By Karl Spurzem and Loris Poidvin It is one of the most beautiful, if not the most beautiful, coastal road in the Mediterranean. From Centuri in the north to Saint-Florent, the tightly winding Corniche runs along the west coast of Cap Corse. On the right, deep below, the inky blue of the sea, on the left the Mediterranean palette of marble-grey rock, the silver of the olives, the matte emerald green of the maquis. Add to that the warm wind, the scent of wild thyme - paradise seems to lie behind every bend. But the dream journey ends abruptly. Between Canelle and Ogliastro, a huge concrete structure suddenly crouches on the rock that drops steeply into the sea - thrown down, it looks like a juggernaut, surreal, like a shattered spaceship or a dead prehistoric creature. It is the Canari mine, the largest open-cast asbestos mine in Europe in the middle of the 20th century. From the street, only the factory building can be seen. It rises up the rock in terraces, windows with broken glass, roofs full of holes, only the facade facing the street is covered with tarpaulins. Scattered signs prohibit entry to the ruins or warn of health risks. The signs do not say why. It takes some imagination, but this ruin was the pride of Corsican industry for two decades and its product was the source of wealth that the eternally poor island had never known before. Because half the post-war world was hungry for asbestos. The mine began operations in 1946. It was owned by the Société Minière de l’Amiante, its main shareholder Eternit, an Austrian-German-Belgian group that was founded in the 1920s and became a global company with asbestos. His successful product, fiber cement, was considered a miracle material. If asbestos didn't exist, it would have to be invented. The silicate minerals found in some rocks around the world, which crystallize in thread-like forms, can be processed into industrially usable fibers, which is why they are called mountain flax. They are incredibly strong, non-flammable, acid and weather-resistant, have outstanding insulating properties, can be easily mixed with other materials and can even be spun. With countless applications - in the shipyard, construction and automotive industries, in the electrical and textile industries - asbestos has become indispensable. If asbestos didn't exist, millions of people would have led longer, healthier lives. Its fibers are so fine that they are "alveolar-permeable", reaching the most delicate branches of the bronchi up to the alveoli, the lung sacs, where they cause terrible damage. They cause chronic inflammation, which leads to abestosis, a pathological change in the lung tissue, which in turn leads to lung cancer and, particularly often, mesotheliomas, which are malignant tumors of the peritoneum. The devilish thing about asbestosis is its enormous latency: it takes between ten and 60 years for the cancer to break out. By then it is often too late for a curative therapy - and the cause is usually not identified. The risks of asbestos dust have long been known. Asbestosis was first described in 1906, lung cancer as a result of asbestos exposure was recognized as an occupational disease in 1943, and it has been officially classified as carcinogenic since 1970. Individual countries banned asbestos earlier, but it took until 2005 for the EU to ban its use - the result of aggressive lobbying by producers, who in many countries achieved years of delays in classifying it as a hazardous substance. Asbestos is still mined and processed in emerging countries. This is an excerpt from the text. You can read the entire article in mare No. 152. Subscribers can also read it here in the mare archive - https://www.mare.de/archive/login.
0
1
Leaving Morsiglia, this superb road runs along the seaside and offers a unique perspective on Alisu cove.
1
0
Small asphalt road from Morsiglia to the small abandoned village of Pastina. Very little traffic, beautiful curves and sublime views, with fairly dense vegetation. Stunning.
2
0
다른 지역의 최고의 자전거 경로를 살펴보세요.
무료로 가입하기