A map of 2998 sports and nature sites in Central Finland.

A laavu & sauna maintained by the Säkinmäki village association

A sauna next to the hut that can be rented
The island of Pirtsaari has a public sauna (Pirtsaaren sauna) that anyone can use during the boating season. There is a 10€ sauna fee / hour to use this sauna. If you are more than one person a sauna fee of 5€ / hour, per person is collected. So if there are 4 of you it costs 20€ an hour total. These fees enable tree maintenance at the sites.. There is a sauna shift reservation board to reserve your time. This sauna is only in use during the boating season
Kalasaaren sauna is on a pier on the island of Kalasaari. There is a 10€ sauna fee / hour to use this sauna. If you are more than one person a sauna fee of 5€ / hour, per person is collected. So if there are 4 of you it costs 20€ an hour total. These fees enable tree maintenance at the sites.. There is a sauna shift reservation board to reserve your time. This sauna is only in use during the boating season. The Kaupunkirakennepalvelut, kaupunkirakenteen neuvonta (Urban planning services of jyvaskyla) manages this location. <a href="https://paijanteenvirkistysalueyhdistys.fi/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/01-Kalasaari-lahestymiskartta.pdf">official .PDF of Kalasaari</a> A longer video showing Kalasaari Sauna: https://youtube.com/watch?v=X9Epcvqv3xE



Jouhtisvuori laavu. Jouhtisvuori, Tankolampi, Konnevesi


There is a small old cottage / campfire site here that hikers can use.

Poltinlampi hut can be rented.

Purtomäen laavu is on hiking & biking trails in Häähninmäki. You are allowed to tent camp around the Laavu.

A llavu on the island of Vanha Kirkkosaari

Ahvenus Laavu is located in Heiska. You can get to it by car. It has an observation tower close by. There is no firewood or hiking trail to this laavu.

Huikko Village Society owned/rented by Kota. The laavu is located next to the ski hill (1.5 km). It is maintained by the Huikko Village Association and the municipality of Toivakka.




The Koljatti nature reserve trail is about 0.6 km along the maintained, marked shore section from the parking area to Koljatin laavu - Viitasaari and the fireplace at the foot of the cliff in Viitasaari, Central Finland. The same protected pocket of forest and rock is often called Koljatti or Koljat in local speech and sits on the Blue Road (Sininen tie) west of Highway 4. For closures, firewood supply notices, printable maps, and how the gravel access behaves in thaw, the City of Viitasaari’s Koljatti page is the best authority(1). Metsähallitus publishes the same trail as Koljatin luontopolku on Luontoon.fi for nationwide outdoor planning(2). The city describes a 16.5-hectare reserve owned by Viitasaari on the Hakomäki farm, famous for a tall rock wall that drops toward Lake Kalliojärvi. The land rises as moor and rocky knolls inland while the trail stays mostly easy under spruce, with duckboards over the wettest ledges above a small stream channel. About 0.6 km along this shore walk you reach Koljatin laavu - Viitasaari, where a woodshed and fireplace sit under the cliff; open fires are allowed only there, and you should check grass and forest fire warnings before lighting anything(1). A dry toilet stands near the parking area at the trailhead, but there is no waste collection along the route, so carry rubbish out(1). Dogs must stay on leash throughout the reserve(1)(4). Staying on the marked path protects fragile ground on the protected site. The cliff and boulder slopes are slippery when wet, and there are holes and small erosion scars near the brook—Retkipaikka’s long visit report by Mikko Lemmetti explains why the early “sortumavaara” signs deserve a close read even though families use the trail often(3). Out in the Nature adds an English-language photo walk, notes how uneven roots and rocks feel on a sub-kilometre hike, and flags Erakkokallio (Recluse Rock) with the story of hermit Uuno Leppänen, who lived by the lake until 1961(4). Beyond the maintained nuotiopaikka the shoreline route continues, but the city stresses it is rough, not maintained, and only for visitors comfortable with off-path risk(1). If you study nearby geology, the same pages point to a boulder cave field south of the cliffs and other historical traces—without formal signage—so treat those as optional detours you research separately(1)(4). Viitasaari lies on a well-known recreation corridor; Keski-Suomi offers many other lake-and-ridge outings once you are in the area.
Lyötinmäki Nature Trail is about 3 km as one continuous line in Hankasalmi in Central Finland. For the latest official wording on status, terrain, and interpretation boards along the route, start with the City of Hankasalmi’s Retkeily ja ulkoilu pages(1). Visit Hankasalmi presents Hankasalmi as a countryside destination with nature sites and outdoor activities worth checking before you travel(3). From August 2023 onward, the municipality has discontinued maintenance on this site for the time being. It states that the terrain is difficult underfoot and that marking and guidance in the field are no longer adequate, so hiking here is not recommended until conditions change(1). Treat any visit as off-network exploration: carry a map, expect rough forest tread, and confirm the current message on the city’s outdoor pages before you go(1). When the route was actively managed, materials described it as starting along Kynsivedentie roughly 400 m from the Venekoskentie junction, with about 4.5 km of marked line in the terrain using red paint(1). The same pages explain the local story: Lyötinmäki is a drumlin-shaped glacial deposit with a bedrock core, and the trail passes ruins of a 19th-century croft on the hillside. The name Lyötti refers to a bat-and-ball game once played on the hill with large groups(1). The northeastern part of the hill lies near an aggregate quarry that may operate intermittently from autumn to spring; the city notes that blasting is signalled with a horn—keep well clear and respect any site restrictions(1). There are no linked service points in our database along this line yet. If you need maintained trails nearby, the City of Hankasalmi groups Lyötinmäen luontopolku on the same outdoor hub with Keskisenlammen luontopolku, Häähninmäen ulkoilualue, and Kärkkäälän luontopolku(1).
Töyrilampi hiking trail is about 12.9 km as one point-to-point walk in Kannonkoski on the forests and lake shores between inland start coordinates and the Kivijärvi shoreline at Kismaniemi. For the pond, lean-to, firewood hut, dry toilet, tent-friendly pine shore, and the two ways to reach Töyrilampi by car or on foot, start with the Municipality of Kannonkoski’s Töyrilampi page(1). For driving landmarks at the Töyrilammentie turn from Sininen tie and for lean-to accessibility, use the Municipality of Kannonkoski’s Töyrilampi / Teerilampi lean-to page(2). Along the route you pass Töyrilampi kuivakäymälä and Töyrilampi laavu at roughly 10.2 km—Teerilampi is another name you still see on older signs and pages for the same pond. That cluster sits on the same corridor as Talvipyöräilyreitti, Töyrilampi pyöräpolku, Maakuntaura - Kannonkoski, and the short trail Kismanniemi trail, Lake Kivijärvi, so you can combine a day hike with a bike segment or hop onto the broader Maakuntaura network toward Piispala and beyond. Kismaniemi pysäköintialue is the practical trailhead on the lake side; Kismanniemi keittokatos Kivijärvi, Kismanniemi laavu Kivijärvi, Isonhiekan laavu, and Kismanniemi polttopuusuoja-kuivakäymälä ring the same cape for cooking shelters, lean-tos, and firewood storage. About 12 km in, Koiralammen kota adds a Lappish hut for shelter-focused stops—read more on our page for Koiralammen kota when you plan an overnight or meal stop. The wider Keski-Suomen maakuntaura runs from Saarijärvi toward Kannonkoski through Pyhä-Häkki National Park with maintained rest points on the Saarijärvi side; Visit Saarijärvi summarizes distances and service buildings on that main branch(3). Visit Kannonkoski’s nature overview highlights Kivijärvi’s sand shores and mixed forest walking in the municipality’s outdoor portfolio(4). On the Piispala–Kismanniemi section, Jalkaisin’s 2013 on-foot account still reads well for how blue paint on tree trunks, occasional boardwalks over wet ground, and wooden distance signs feel between Piispala-type forest and the Töyrilampi shoreline before you drop toward Kismaniemi’s beach rocks(5). Conditions, firewood levels, and litter risk change year to year—pack out what you bring and double-check the municipality pages before you go. Kannonkoski is the home municipality. Central Finland is the larger region.
The Kotajärvi Trail is about 6.8 km of marked hiking in Pyhä-Häkki National Park, between Saarijärvi and Viitasaari in Central Finland. It crosses some of southern Finland’s best-known old-growth pine forest and mire, with landmark ancient pines and a rest area on Lake Kotajärvi. Metsähallitus lists the route, services, and national park rules on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Saarijärvi describes how the Keski-Suomen Maakuntaura long-distance hiking and ski route runs from Saarijärvi to Kannonkoski through the same park landscape(2). For on-the-ground detail—marking colours, boardwalk sections, and pacing—Luontopolkumies Mika Markkanen’s walk-through on Retkipaikka is especially helpful(3). From the gate and info shelter, the path climbs through Mastomäki’s mixed pine and spruce forest. Within the first kilometre you pass signage for “Uusi iso puu”, a celebrated old pine dated to 1641 in on-trail boards, then the ragged trunk of “Vanha iso puu”, rooted here since the 1500s. The route dips toward mire edges on Kotaneva, with a roughly half-kilometre duckboard section along the eastern side where cotton grass and bog plants are easy to see in late summer. At the Riihineva junction the green-marked Riihinevan polku crosses the same mire; Tulijärven polku, the park’s longest trail, shares parts of the network and is marked white where paths meet. Approaching Kotajärvi from the east, side spurs reach the lakeshore before the main rest cluster. Lake Kotajärvi is the social heart of the circuit: Kotajärvi tulentekopaikka Pyhä-Häkki and Kotajärvi keittokatos Pyhä-Häkki sit beside the water, Kotajärvi laituri reaches into the lake for a quick cool-down, and dry toilets are available in the same area. About 5.5 km along the line you pass Pyhä-Häkki porakaivo, a drilled well for water. The return leg to parking is easier underfoot than the rocky, rooty opening kilometres; some day visitors walk straight out-and-back toward Kotajärvi and skip the southern mast and mire loop. The trail ties into broader hiking: Keski-Suomen maakuntaura (Central Finland Trail), Tulijärven polku, Maakuntauran retkeilyreitti/Saarijärvi and the winter Maakuntauran latu Saarijärvi use the same Kotajärvi service points, so you can extend toward Poika-aho sauna and rental cabin, Tulijärven laavu, or Kourajärven laavu on longer schedules. The very short Kotajärvi polku laiturille is the marked spur to the pier if you want only the lakeshore.
Kanavuori Trail is about 2.9 km of marked walking on a rocky hill beside Highway 4 in Vaajakoski, Jyväskylä, in Central Finland. For markings, maintenance responsibility, season tips, and feedback channels, Metsähallitus publishes the Kanavuori trail page on Luontoon.fi(1). The City of Jyväskylä briefly introduces the same path where it climbs the east side of Vaajakoski on state-owned land, with the first nature-trail post at Saltunlahti(2). Visit Jyväskylä Region rounds out practical visitor detail, including how steps and fixed rope handrails ease the steepest climb, where to park near Naissaari, and how Linkki buses reach the area(3). From the Saltuntie shoreline the route soon passes the Naissaari and Uimalanniemi recreation strip: Naissaaren frisbeegolfrata, Uimalanniemen avantouintipaikka, Uimalanniemen beachvolleykenttä and Uimalanniemen uimaranta sit within a few hundred metres of the start and pair well with a half-day outing if you want a swim, disc golf, or winter swimming in season before or after the hill climb. The climb itself is the memorable part: bare bedrock, steep grades, and in places blocky ground until you gain the summit ridge that stays roughly a hundred metres above the trailhead. Along the crest the walking eases, with several lookout spots toward Lake Päijänne, Lake Leppävesi, and the Naissaari shore landscape described by regional tourism pages(3). Walkers also pass large glacial erratics and a junction where side branches lead toward viewpoints such as Pikku-Leuha; highway noise can carry to the edge of the hill, though the open rock and forest still feel surprisingly wild so close to town(4). There is no winter maintenance; Visit Jyväskylä Region and Metsähallitus both treat ice and snow as a reason to postpone the visit rather than expect trail grooming(1)(3). Sturdy shoes with good grip matter, especially on the ascent and descent(3)(4). Luontopolkumie's illustrated walk-through on Retkipaikka notes how clearly the trees are marked with red paint, how tiring the stair flights feel, and that some older information boards along the route are weather-worn(4).
Touruvuori Nature Trail is about 3.5 km in Palokka, Jyväskylä, in Central Finland. It climbs through a roughly 40-hectare nature reserve on Touruvuori hill, mixing forest, rocky slopes, and patches of mire, and reaches a summit at about 203 m above sea level with wide views over the city and surroundings. For closures, conditions, and the most accurate route description, start with the City of Jyväskylä’s Touruvuori trail page(1). Visit Jyväskylä Region’s trail listing rounds typical walking time to about one to two hours and notes clockwise travel, yellow blazes, POLKU posts, and 20 information boards on the full circuit (14 on the shorter option)(2). The described walk is followed clockwise. After a gentle climb of about 700 m, a short but steep pull leads to the summit; the path then runs along the west side of the ridge, turns east and south, and returns toward the start along the east side(1). You can shorten the outing to about 2 km by turning back from the summit(2). The ground is often rocky and uneven, with structures on the steepest pitches; in wet weather the lower sections can be slippery or soggy, so sturdy, waterproof footwear helps(1)(2). The city does not recommend the nature trail for small children, older walkers with balance concerns, or people with limited mobility(1)(2). The nature trail itself is not winter-maintained, but groomed ski tracks and lit running circuits lie in the same Touruvuori outdoor area in season(1). Pappilanvuori parkkipaikka sits in the same recreation zone and works well if you arrive by car. Touruvuori-Tyyppälä yhdysreitti 1,5 km, Touruvuoren kuntopolku 4,5 km, Touruvuoren kuntopolku 6,5 km, Touruvuori - Ampujien maja 5 km, and Latu Touruvuori - Ampujien maja 5 km share the wider trail network around the hill—useful if you want a longer run, ski outing, or connection toward Heinämäki parking and other links. You can combine a bus ride with the walk: check Linkki routes and times before you head out(3).
For closures, grooming, and the full list of access parking along this corridor, start with Visit Laukaa’s Metsoreitti page(1). Visit Jyväskylä Region summarises the same network as a long multi-use spine through Laukaa, with 15 kota or lean-to shelters along the way(2). The trail is about 37.3 km as one continuous hiking route through Laukaa in Central Finland. It is not a loop. Official descriptions cast it as the backbone of the municipality’s outdoor network, linking Leppävesi, Vihtavuori, Laukaa parish village, Peurunka, Kuusa, and Haapala, with blue markings in the terrain(1)(2). In summer and the snow-free season the route is used by walkers and mountain bikers; in winter the same corridor is part of Laukaa’s ski-trail system, including a lit section from Peurunka toward Ampujien maja and an unlit gap of about 2 km between Heposuo and Tiituspohja(1). From the northern part of the line, Kivikallion kota and Haukilammen kota sit a few kilometres in, and Kalliolanmäen laavu follows before you reach Metso-Retti parkkipaikka—handy if you want to drive close to the forest block around Haukilampi. The Vihtavuori area clusters sports fields and the short Lammasmäen luontopolku nature loop and Vihtavuori–Keikkanen trail and ski track alongside Metsoreitti; Sikomäen laavu and Heposuon laavu give sheltered breaks before the route drops toward Leppävesi. Near Touruvuori, the Touruvuori - Ampujien maja 5 km running line and ski track meet the main corridor beside Ampujien majan kota and the biathlon practice area. Through Peurunka, Peurungan kota and the resort services sit beside Metsoreitti, and Peurungan ulkoilureitti branches in the same sports landscape. Farther east, Oitinmäen kota, Varjolan parkkipaikka and Kuusaankosken parkkipaikka frame the Kuusaankoski rapids area, with Kuusaankosken laavu and Majajärven uimapaikka for breaks by the water. Loukkukorven kota sits farther along the forest traverse toward Haapala, where Haapalan laavu Laukaa and Hietasyrjän kota sit in the Hietasyrjä esker landscape that Visit Laukaa highlights as a scenic passage(1). Laukaa lies in Central Finland. The same spine connects to shorter local lines such as Vaajakoski to Ampujien maja trail, Peurunka - Oitinmäen kota, Äijälä–Haapala trail (Metsoreitti segment), and Kk-Kuusa ulkoilureitti near Laukaa centre—useful if you want to stitch together a longer tour from signed links(1).
The Rutalahti trail is about 6.5 km of marked hiking between the Rutalahti village area and Soimalampi in Leivonmäki National Park in Joutsa, Central Finland. Metsähallitus publishes route information on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Jyväskylä Region lists Koskikaran kierros together with parking, footwear, and structures on the river loop that most people walk before this connector(2). From a practical standpoint, most people combine this line with Koskikaran kierros: you walk the riverside loop past rapids and boardwalks, then branch off on the marked connector toward the national park. The Rutalahti village website explains that a marked path leaves from the Porraskoski bridge area toward Soimalampi lean-to; it quotes about nine kilometres along that branch by their map, while the line on our map is about 6.5 km to the Soimalampi lean-tos—use the figure that matches how you join the routes(3). akpojan retkiblogi describes the stretch along Rutajoki in detail: birch and spruce riverside forest, pine forest higher up, small rocky slopes and mires, and several rapids before the intersection toward Soimalampi(4). Boardwalks and wooden bridges can be slippery when wet; waterproof footwear is often the safer choice outside dry spells(2). At Soimalampi you reach Soimalampi laavu and Soimalammen laavu—lean-to shelter space by the pond where you can stop for a meal break or overnight in line with national-park rules. Soimalampi polku is a short marked foot loop around the pond that shares the same corner. Leivonmäki MTB runs along the wider bike network toward Selänpohja if you are pairing hikers and cyclists in one car. For closures after winter ice jams or high water on Rutajoki, check the latest notices on the city and Metsähallitus pages; Koskikaran kierros is sometimes closed seasonally when ice and flood risk make riverside structures unsafe(3).

Tiilikka polkupyöräreitti is a roughly 20.6 km point-to-point forest ride in Central Finland, threading Kannonkoski, Karstula, and Saarijärvi toward Pyhä-Häkki National Park. It follows the same Keski-Suomen maakuntaura corridor that the City of Saarijärvi documents as a roughly 40 km summer and winter multi-use link between Saarijärvi, Pyhä-Häkki, and Kannonkoski, with blue paint marks on trees plus junction signs on the provincial sections(1). For national-park boundaries, services, and up-to-date rules, start from the Pyhä-Häkki pages on Luontoon.fi(2). Visit Kannonkoski lists the local trails network as a starting point for planning bike and other outdoor loops in the municipality(3). Riders and route contributors on Jälki.fi describe the wider Heramäki–Vuosjoki–Kourajärvi–Tiilikka–Poika-aho mountain-bike line as comparatively easy forest-road riding from Heramäki toward Kourajärvi, then rougher tread with more technical sections and occasionally poor maintenance closer to Poika-aho(4). On our map the line is not a circuit: it is a one-way forest journey. About 10 km along the ride you reach Tulijärven laavu, a long stop at a wilderness lean-to where Keski-Suomen maakuntaura meets Tulijärven polku; it is a natural lunch point before the pinewoods pick up rocks and roots toward the national park. Near the Pyhä-Häkki edge, the Poika-aho cluster brings together Poika-aho vuokratupa (a Metsähallitus rental hut with sauna and well water in season) and Poika-aho sauna in the farmyard; advance booking and key codes run through Eräluvat.fi(5). From here Poika-aho yhdyspolku Pyhä-Häkki drops into marked hiking lines inside the park if you continue on foot. If you extend mileage toward Saarijärvi on the same provincial system, the City of Saarijärvi’s published stage tables include a “Tiilikka” rest about 22 km from the city centre with a kota, firewood storage, campfire place, and dry toilet—useful for aligning timings with the official map PDF(1). Keski-Suomi is classic lake-and-forest lakeland; Saarijärvi is the usual administrative hub for printed maakuntaura maps and Saarijärvi–Viitasaari road access to the park visitor strip(1)(3).
For the latest trail information, sauna bookings, and hut or tower reservations, start with the Häähninmäki outdoor area page(1). The mountain biking route is about 29.8 km as one continuous ride through the Häähninmäki outdoor area on the Hankasalmi–Konnevesi border in Central Finland. The wider summer path network is roughly 35 km of linked trails shared with hikers and trail runners(1)(2). Visit Jyväskylä Region describes the hill as an old boundary between historic hunting grounds, with marked paths and improved boards over several seasons, year-round use including fat biking and trail running, a 2020 observation tower, and the 2012 Häähnintupa wilderness hut for rest and overnight stays(3). The Visit Jyväskylä Region cycling pages add practical notes for mountain bikers alongside the main site(2). Terrain shifts between spruce and birch forest, open fields, rockier ground, duckboards across open mire, and forest climbs with rolling elevation(1)(2)(5). The high point clusters Häähninmäen näkötorni and Häähnintupa; the hill is about 190 m above sea level and the tower adds about 20 m(1)(2). From Häähninmäen parkkipaikka the climb leads past Peikkola to the lookout tower and Häähnintupa area, where grill spots and dry toilets sit close together. About 21 km into the route, Kivivuoren luola parkkipaikka gives car access toward Kivimäen luola. Toward the west side, Poltinlampi has parking, a reservable sauna, and the Poltinlampi wilderness hut at the mire edge; dry toilets are available there and near the tower and hut. Häähninmäki parkkipaikka and Purtomäen laavu anchor the southern part of the network—read more about bookings and rules on our place pages. Parastasuomessa describes wide, compacted summer trails that also suit winter riding when snow allows, volunteer maintenance, and roughly 8 000–10 000 visits per year(6). Jalkaisin's autumn hiking report notes red wooden arrow markers and some orange paint, with signage still improving in places(7). From this area you can also access walking routes such as Paskolammin luontopolku, Häähnintuvan polku, Sirkkamäen luontopolku starting near the hut, and the longer Häähninmäen retkeilyreitit hiking network that shares many of the same service points.
This national cycling connector is about 32.3 km point-to-point across Central Finland, linking Rutalahti in Joutsa with Toivakka and continuing toward the wider Jyväskylä lakelands. It sits on the Hitonhaudan sorakierros (Goblin’s Gorge Gravel Loop), one of three Lakeland by Cycle bikepacking corridors that Visit Jyväskylä Region promotes together with quiet gravel roads, digital GPX guidance, and thousands of kilometres of linked riding(2). Visit Jyväskylä Region’s gravel and bike touring page for Central Finland summarises seasons, the three main loops, and how link routes split or extend them(3). On the Joutsa leg the same network passes Rutalahti village landscapes and onward toward Leivonmäki National Park on longer tour days; City of Joutsa summarises how the loop uses local gravel roads and points riders to Bikeland for shelters, campfire sites, and services marked on the map(1). The same corridor is drawn on Bikeland’s Hitonhauta-themed map layer for quick filtering of lean-tos and resupply hints(8). From the Koskikara–Rutalahti outdoor cluster you can warm up beside Koskikaran luontopolun keittokatos and tie in to the short Koskikaran kierros walking loop or the longer Tervasreitti bike circuit before rolling north. About 8 km into the ride, Viisarimäen Parkkipaikka gives access to Viisarimäen luontopolku and Kuivavuoren laavu on Kuivavuori—a steep marked walking line with a lake view from the lean-to, better explored on foot than in the saddle(7). Further on, Toivakka spreads services along the corridor: Paikkalanvuoren laavu and the village sports shore cluster including Toivakan uimaranta, with Perinnepolku and winter ski corridors sharing the same hub if you return in snow. Toward the northwest the line approaches cross-municipality links such as Leppälahden hiihtolatu Jyväskylä, useful context for how trail networks overlap across Jyväskylä, Joutsa and Toivakka(2)(4). Expect mostly gravel and compacted forest roads with short paved links where the published loop crosses busier rural connectors—typical of the day stages Visit Jyväskylä Region describes between Nukula, Rutalahti, Joutsa town, Tampinmylly and Toivakka(2). Seasonally, regional guidance targets late May through late September for comfortable gravel touring, with the understanding that dry midsummer roads can be dusty and shoulder-season rain softens some shoulders(1)(3). Hitonhaudan rotkolaakso itself is temporarily out of official use for safety; long-loop riders should follow current Visit Jyväskylä Region notices rather than detouring into the gorge without checking status(2)(3).
The trail sits in Kivijärvi in Central Finland, on the forested Suomenselkä upland belt northwest of the parish village. For maps of the municipality’s roughly 55 km groomed ski trail network, campfire stops, beaches, and related outdoor points, use the City of Kivijärvi sports and recreation facilities page(1); it links a downloadable latukartta PDF that shows how branches such as the kuntorata and Hautalan lenkki reach toward Hoikanperä. Day-to-day grooming bulletins for those winter corridors appear on the City of Kivijärvi trail conditions page(2). The mountain biking route is about 4.9 km as one point-to-point line through forest between Hoikanperä and the Permikangas area—handy if you want a short off-road link rather than a long road detour. According to the Finnish Wikipedia article on Hoikanperä(3), the village lies at the north end of Hoikansalmi, roughly seven kilometres northwest of Kivijärvi centre, which helps you orient relative to Hoikansalmi’s shore roads. Near the finish you pass Permikankaan nuotiopaikka on Permikankaantie—a good place to pause for a snack or fire if rules and drought warnings allow. Read more about that fireplace on our Permikankaan nuotiopaikka page. In winter the same corridor doubles as Hoikanperän hiihtolatu, one branch of the municipal machine-groomed network that ties back toward Peltokankaan liikuntapuisto and the ice trails on Kivijärvi lake when snow and ice safety permit(1)(2). Summer riders share the unfrozen track bed with hikers; give walkers space and slow for blind crests on narrow sections. For a wider picture of cycling elsewhere in the lake-and-forest belt, Visit Jyväskylä Region gathers regional road and off-road ideas beyond this short municipal segment(4).
Kuivakäymälä, tulentekopaikka.

Kehonpainolla toimivia kuntoiluvälineitä metsän keskellä.
Kohteen ylläpitäjä kaupunki/kadut ja puistot.
Ikäihmisille sopivia ulkokuntolaitteita.



18-väyläinen rata. Lähtöpaikka urheilukentän kopilta. Alueelta löytyy myös urheilukenttä 300 m, pururata, laavu, ulko-WC ja RC-autorata. Frisbeegolfrata ei ole talvikäytössä, koska alueella on hiihtoladut. Toivakan frisbeegolf-rata Course classification A1

Jonkin verran korkeuseroja. 18 väylää. The Viitasaari disc golf course Savivuori DiscGolfPark is for beginners but also more advanced players.. A 18-hole course, whose trees and elevation differences offer challenges even for those who have thrown for longer on a couple of long fairways. The course is located in the Savivuori outdoor recreation area.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Rata on maksullinen. Jonkin verran korkeuseroja. Ylläpitäjät Peurunka ja PuskaPuttaajat Ry.
Tasainen maasto.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja. Radan rakentaja ja ylläpitäjä: Petäjäveden kunta ja FrisbeeGolf Petäjävesi ry (FGP).
Tasainen maasto.




Käyttö omalla vastuulla. There are fitness stairs in Viitasaari in the Savivuori outdoor recreation area, in Lummeniemi Camp Center and the Sahis Ski Center.

Portaita on 100 Suomi100-teeman mukaisesti. Kuntoportaiden luona on infotaulu, jossa on liikekuvia. Portailla ei saa ajaa pyörällä. Portaat eivät ole talvikäytössä.
89 askelmaa, korkeusero n. 13 metriä.
80 porrasta, korkeusero 11,5 m. Ei talvikunnossapitoa.
49 porrasta, pituus 46,5 m, nousua 7,5 m.
108 porrasta. Kulku Siilotien päästä.
155 askelmaa.


Uima-allas ja kahluuallas.
Poreallas, uima-allas, lastenallas. Allasosaston tekniikka uusittu 2015.
Discover the diverse landscapes of Central Finland. From cultural sights to hidden natural gems.
Our core dataset is powered by official sources including Metsähallitus and LIPAS (the national database for sports facilities in Finland). We pull the latest GPX routes and location metadata directly from these authorities.
Note: Our database was last synced in 2026. While we strive for accuracy, always consult the official website which we display on each place or route or notices at the trail for safety-critical updates or seasonal closures.
No. Huts.fi is an independent Finnish platform. While we work with official open-data sets from organizations like Metsähallitus, we are a private entity.
Yes. Accessing our maps, trail data, and field information is currently free for all users.
We operate on a community-first model: we provide the platform, and our users help keep it accurate by sharing real-time updates (e.g., Is there firewood at the laavu? or Is the sand field dry enough to play?).
Our roadmap includes:
• Offline Maps: Downloadable trails for when you lose signal in the backwoods.
• Trail Navigation: Follow routes directly from your Phone or Watch.
• Live Safety Sharing: Real-time location sharing so friends and family know you're safe on the trail.