A map of 248 sports and nature sites in Jämsä.
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. <a href="https://paijanteenvirkistysalueyhdistys.fi/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/06-Vuorissalo-lahestymiskartta.pdf">official .PDF of Vuorissalo</a>
No wood supply.
<a href="https://paijanteenvirkistysalueyhdistys.fi/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/06-Vuorissalo-lahestymiskartta.pdf">official .PDF of Vuorissalo</a>
There is no wood supply on the lean -to.
Next to a long water canoeing route. Also suitable for overnight stays. Pier, wooden and campfire site. There is no passage for the lean -to land. Majaniemen laavu Kuoksenjärvellä Kuhmoisissa kuuluu Pitkäveden melontareitille, jota ylläpitää Päijälän kylän yhdistykset. Laavulle ei kulkua maitse, vesitse vapaassa käytössä. Laavu, tulipaikka, puucee, laituri.
No wood supply.
Maakuntauraa Jämsänkoskella is a short subsection of the Keski-Suomen maakuntaura long-distance corridor in Jämsänkoski, Jämsä. The trail is about 0.7 km as mapped here and sits on the same blue-marked regional network that Luontoon.fi lists as the Jämsä–Jyväskylä Maakuntaura section(1). For local trail maintenance contacts and the wider outdoor programme in the municipality, the City of Jämsä’s outdoor recreation pages are the practical starting point(2). Keskisuomalainen reported in 2025 on renewed, marked walking access along the Keski-Suomen maakuntaura between Jyväskylä and Jämsä, with the work highlighted at Pukinvuori in Jämsä(3). On the ground, this segment is best understood as part of the Jämsä–Jämsänkoski branch of the old regional trail. Jalkaisin describes the full branch from the Särkijärvi sports-centre area toward Jämsänkoski—forest tracks, field edges, wet patches with duckboards, and faded but still visible blue paint marks and wooden signposts—useful terrain and wayfinding detail for longer outings(4). On our line, the main shelter connection is Vuorilammin laavu: the lean-to sits a short detour from the route (see our Vuorilammin laavu place page for facilities). The same shelter also sits on the short Vuorilammi polku loop nearby. The longer Keski-Suomen Maakuntaura, Jyväskylä–Jämsä osuus walking section meets this network on-route if you want to extend the day toward Jyväskylä. Allow only a few minutes for the 0.7 km mapped segment itself; treat it as a connector or arrival leg within a wider Maakuntaura day rather than a standalone hike.
Vuojansalo Trail is about 3.2 km on Vuojansalo, a forested island in Lake Salosvesi–Pettämä near Koskenpää in Jämsä, Central Finland. The route is not a closed loop; it follows paths on the island with views over the lake and mixed woodland. For the published length and place name, start with Visit Jyväskylä Region’s Vuojansalo trail listing(1). The island lies along the long Wanhan Witosen paddling route between Petäjävesi and Jämsä. Retkipaikka’s article on that canoe journey describes Salosvesi crossings, rest places such as Kuivaniemi near the island, and how paddlers experience the same lake system from the water(2). If you are combining a walk on Vuojansalo with canoeing, their notes on wind on open water and staging are useful background(2). Taivaannaula has illustrated Vuojansalo from Koskenpää as part of local lake country(3). Plan food, water, and shelter for a self-supported island walk; no lean-tos or trailhead parking are indicated for this short route. If you also paddle, Wanhan Witosen melontareitti osa II is the regional kayak route on the same waterbody.
For walks and day trips around Jämsä and the Himos–Jämsä area, Visit Himos–Jämsä’s hiking destinations page is a practical place to start(1). The City of Jämsä has published details on the wider Himos–Jämsä outdoor route programme—about 167 km in total, with rest points and routes intended for free year-round walking and cycling, and skiing or snowshoeing in winter where those sections exist—with motor vehicle use excluded from the planned network(2). Edesniemi Trail is a very short loop of about 0.2 km in Jämsä, in Central Finland. It is a local forest pocket rather than a long hike: you quickly reach Edesniemi nuotiopaikka and, a little farther along, Edesniemi puucee—enough for a stretch, a snack, or a stop by the fire ring when open fires are allowed. Visit Himos–Jämsä’s laavu and campfire pages remind visitors that not every site stocks firewood, and that you should check forest-fire warnings before lighting an open fire(3). The trail sits in the same municipality as better-known Jämsä outings such as Sorvajärven luontoliikuntapolku and Palvian luontopolku listed on the regional hiking page(1), but this segment is intentionally minimal. Jämsä lies in Central Finland. Combine this stop with other Himos–Jämsä trails or laavu visits if you want a fuller day outdoors.
For the public lean-to and fire-making spot beside Vuorilammi lake, Visit Jyväskylä Region publishes the Vuorilammin laavu listing with the Keltasuontie, Koskenpää address(1). Practical laavu habits in Jämsä—checking fire bans, carrying your own firewood when none is provided, and leaving no trace—are covered in a Himos-Jämsä guest article aimed at day trips and overnights in local shelters(2). Jalkaisin’s walkthrough of the older Keski-Suomen maakuntaura branch toward Jämsänkoski reminds readers that summer markings on regional paths can be thin and that wet ground and overgrown ditches appear between the familiar blue paint blazes—useful context if you link this short spur with longer Keski-Suomi walking(3). Jämsä sits in Central Finland, and this route is a very short footpath of about 0.5 km to Vuorilammin laavu on the shore of the small forest lake Vuorilammi in the Koskenpää area. Vuorilammi is a compact, island-free forest lake surrounded by mires and gentle forest uplands typical of the drainages heading toward Vuojoki. The main reason to walk the spur is Vuorilammin laavu: a sheltered stop with a designated cooking and campfire area where you can pause by the water(1). Read more about the lean-to on our Vuorilammin laavu page. The same laavu lies on the line of Maakuntauraa Jämsänkoskella, a nearby hiking segment in our database, and it sits along the Keski-Suomen Maakuntaura, Jyväskylä- Jämsä osuus walking corridor—so you can treat this path as a lakeside detour or coffee stop when moving through that regional network(3).
Palvia nature trail is an about 4.3 km forest-and-bog loop north of central Jämsä in the Palvia countryside of Koskenpää parish, in Central Finland. For map links, closure status, and the official trail page, Luontoon.fi is the right starting point(1). Visit Jyväskylä Region packages it as a moderate day hike on natural surface with a kota and campfire, crossing spruce woods, mires, and the Ryönänkases old-growth pocket that is part of the Natura 2000 network(2). Luontopolkumies has re-walked the loop after route realignments and paints a vivid picture of thigh-wet spring footing, the Palvianjärvi east-shore boardwalks, the Isosuo stretch, and how clockwise arrows and blue paint marks behave in tall grass(3). The character is classic inland Central Finland: mixed forest, short climbs, duckboards over wet mire, and small benches above the bog. The line is marked with blue paint on trunks; a few spots have been tricky after routing changes near Palviantie, so carrying a phone map helps(3). About 2.7 km along the circuit you reach Palvia käymälä, a dry toilet beside the trail—useful before the longest boardwalk sections. Near a small forest lake you pass a kota and a campfire site with a woodshed; independent visitors report good firewood availability in autumn 2025, but it is always prudent to verify locally(2)(3). The shore section with pitkospuut flanking Palvianjärvi is often named as the scenic highlight. Jämsä ties together Himos and Koskenpää recreation country; this loop stays quiet enough for a half-day reset without ski-hill crowds. A second mapped hiking line, Palvia Nature Trail, shares the same Palvia block and the same Palvia käymälä stop on a slightly shorter recorded geometry—useful if you are comparing alternatives in the app.
The Kilpavuori route is a roughly 5.5 km hiking trail in the Koskenpää area of Jämsä in Central Finland, listed on Visit Jyväskylä Region with the service address Petäjävedentie 448(1). The walk runs through forested terrain near small lakes in the upper Jämsä catchment; Järviwiki records Kilpalammi as a small lake in Jämsä in the Kymijoki main drainage, with forested shores(2). The trail is about 5.5 km—matching the length on the visitor listing(1). About 4.2 km from the start you pass Rantapirtin frisbeegolfrata on Petäjävedentie 448, where the route line meets Wanhan Witosen melontareitti osa II, a long paddling route on the old Witosen waterway. That is a practical spot to picture how hiking along the shore relates to kayaking and canoeing: the Wanha Witosen melontareitti page gives launch points, rest places, and trip lengths for the wider waterway(3). If you are only walking, treat the crossing as orientation—paddlers use the same general shoreline and landing points. For current conditions and any local notices, check the visitor listing(1) and municipal outdoor information for Jämsä.
Palvia Nature Trail is a 4.1 km forest and mire loop north of Jämsä in the Palvia area of Central Finland. The trail is freely available for day hiking. For markings, maintenance, and any seasonal restrictions, the Palvian luontopolku trail page on Luontoon.fi is the best place to start(1). Visit Jyväskylä Region lists address, duration, and surface type from the regional outdoor database(2). Luontopolkumies on Retkipaikka has a detailed walk-through with photos, including how the eastern section was rerouted beside Palviantie and where the boardwalk runs along Palvianjärvi(3). The loop crosses spruce forest, mires with boardwalks, and the old-growth block Ryönänkases, which is part of the Natura 2000 network(2). A side loop on Vanhanpaikanmäki is about one kilometre through lighter mixed forest(3). The shore of Palvianjärvi and the small mire east of the lake are a highlight, with duckboards close to the water(3). After the mires the route passes older forest where windthrow may require short detours(3). A kota, woodshed, and campfire site sit by a small unnamed pond or lake; firewood availability can vary by season(3). About 1.9 km from the start, Palvia käymälä provides a dry toilet beside the trail. Markings are dark blue paint on tree trunks, often easy to see on pale birch(3). In wet periods the path can be soft; waterproof footwear is sensible(3). In summer, grass may narrow the tread in places(3). Elevation change is modest throughout.
<a href="https://paijanteenvirkistysalueyhdistys.fi/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/06-Vuorissalo-lahestymiskartta.pdf">official .PDF of Vuorissalo</a>
Puistorata, uusittu 2019 10-väyläiseksi.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Paljon korkeuseroja.
Tasainen maasto.
158 askelmaa, korkeus 32 m, pituus 70 m. Ei talvikunnossapitoa.
Toiminnanharjoittaja Jämsän Seudun Ampujat ry.
50 m:n pienoiskivääri- ja villikarjurata, 2 5m:n pistoolirata, 75/100 m:n hirvirata, Trap- ja Skeet-radat.
Hirvikiväärirata Omistaja; Jämsän seudun riistanhoitoyhdistys
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Jämsä.
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.
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