Photographer's Note
Many thanks to "Lefumeur" an Algerian friend for sending me this beautiful picture.
The Babors (Ibaburen Kabyle Berber and Arabic El'Babour-البابور.
are a mountain range in northern Algeria, constituting the bulk of the Petite Kabylie or "Babors of Kabylie." It is separated from the valley of Djurdjura Soummam. It overlooks the Gulf of Bejaia and culminates at 2004 m at Jebel Babor1.
At 70 km north of Setif, the Babors is the name given to two twin beds: the Babors (2004 m) and a Tababort (1969 m), beautiful snowy pyramids in winter.
A national park was created on Babor itself. It measures 1700 hectares biotope offers a home to many endemic species, that is to say we can not find anywhere else in the world, because after separating Africa and Europe, the European species have taken refuge in the hills Maghreb and the massive evolved differently. The two endemic Babors the most famous are the tree of Numidia, the port and very special Kabyle nuthatch, a bird that was not discovered until 1975. Cedars, monkey baboon summit, magnificent views of the sea and the hinterland.
There are just 50 miles north of Setif, a small town called Babor, part of the wilaya of Setif
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