The Aiguilles de Bavella are rocky spikes of red granite that dominate the hill of the same name. The name means needles of Bavella. At 1218 m, the hill connects the to the east coast of Corsica. This massif is smaller yet much more popular than the "aiguilles de Popolasca". The site is characterized by jagged peaks, large rock walls and pine trees twisted by the wind. Located in the centre of the "Massif de Bavella", are the seven "tours d'Asinau," or towers of Asinau, the actual "needles". These are traditionally numbered from south to north:
Punta di l'Acellu
Punta di l'Ariettu
Punta di a Vacca, the only tower accessible to a simple hiker
Punta di u Pargulu, separated from the previous towers by the Bocca di u Pargulu, taken by the Alpine variant of the GR 20
Punta Iolla, separated from the Punta Alta by the Bocca di u Santu
The highest points of the Bavella massif stand a little to the north of the Needles with both Punta di u Furnellu and Punta Muvrareccia at 1899m. The massif is overshadowed by the highest peak in the region, . It extends from the forest of Tova and the town of Solaro to the 1381m Monte Calva to the south, the edges of the Massif de l'Ospedale, and almost to Conca and the sea in the east. It also acts as the basin for the riverSolenzara, the traditional boundary between Corsica's northern and southern sections.
Hiking trails
From Mount Incudine to the Bavella Pass, the GR 20 footpath, after reaching the refuge of Asinau at 1536m, passes by the foot of the aiguilles de Bavella in the Rizzanese Valley, but a so-called "alpine variant" route allows the towers of Bavella to be reached via the Bocca di u Pargulu. After the Bavella pass, the path begins its descent towards Conca, via "Foce Finosa" and the i Paliri refuge at the foot of the Punta Tafunata, a 1312 m high mountain with a hole. A statue of Notre-Dame-des-Neiges stands at the pass, a few meters from the road, on top of a large mound of boulders. The is a famous creek with waterfalls and natural pools. The trail starts about 8 km from there on the D268 towards Sari-Solenzara. The towns of Quenza, Zonza and Conca stand in a curve to the southwest of the Bavella Pass.