Subbetica

Route Mountain Range

Route Mountain Range

Ubicado en un parque natural, ofrece paisajes ideales para senderismo, mountain bike y parapente, con miradores y rica fauna, incluyendo rapaces y mamíferos.

Rute is situated in the heart of the Sierras Subbéticas Natural Park, forming part of the mountain range known as the Sierra de Rute y Horconera. The surrounding area boasts landscapes of great natural beauty, making it an ideal destination for hiking and other activities such as mountain biking, paragliding, caving, climbing, motocross and horse riding, as well as countless natural vantage points offering spectacular views.

The Sierra de Rute forms part of the steepest and highest mountain range in the province of Córdoba, constituting the southernmost peaks of the Subbético Cordobés. It features peaks exceeding 1,100 metres, such as Sierra Alta (1,326 m), the Sierra de Las Cruces (1,270 m) and the Morrón de El Salvador (1,170 m).

As for the vegetation, in the lower reaches we find widespread olive groves. Further up, there is a strip of dense Aleppo pine forest resulting from reforestation.

Finally, where the steep slope of the terrain hinders the growth of the pine forest, groups of low Mediterranean scrub appear; on the sunny slopes, this is dominated by species such as rosemary, esparto grass, gorse, thyme, kermes oak, matagallo and juniper, whilst on the shadier slopes, species requiring more moisture and less sunlight appear, such as gall oak, hawthorn, cornicabra olive, honeysuckle and sporadic specimens of maple, strawberry tree and butcher’s broom...

From a faunal perspective, there is a wide variety of interesting species, including populations of birds of prey: eagle owl, kestrel, Bonelli’s eagle, common buzzard, goshawk, sparrowhawk, little owl and barn owl, with particular mention of the peregrine falcon—the symbol of the Sierras Subbéticas Natural Park—and the griffon vulture. Among the mammals, we can highlight wild boar, badgers, hares and rabbits, ferrets, genets and foxes, as well as the occasional mountain goat.