A map of 130 sports and nature sites in Pihtipudas.
Lean -to and campfire site. Next to the observation tower.
Pistopolku Yölampi is a very short hiking loop of about 100 metres at the Yölampi rest area next to Yölammin tupa in Pihtipudas, Central Finland. It works mainly as a stomp around the shore and hut before or after a longer day: the same junction feeds into Suurijärven luontoreitti, Jääkolun reitti, and the wider Suurijärven vaellusreitistö, where you can reach Nuorasen laavu and Harjuntakasen laavu and continue toward Suurijärven kämppä and other stops on those lines. For the rest area itself, Visit Pihtipudas lists parking, a covered campfire place, a pier, a toilet, and notes that Yölammintie is not maintained in winter(1). The City of Pihtipudas gives the same network overview, difficulty notes, and a printable PDF map on its outdoor pages(2). Metsähallitus describes Yölammin tupa as the small wilderness hut beside the pond on Luontoon.fi(3). Gerald Zojer’s Jalkaisin walking blog tells a first-hand story of starting from the hut, following the Peuran polku signposting from Yölampi, and looping back after Harjuntakasen laavu — worth reading for how quiet the Suurijärvi landscape feels in autumn and for practical notes on keeping a paper map handy where colour-coded paint marks are not fully explained on posts(4). Yölammin tupa stands by the pond without an indoor fireplace; overnight visitors rely on the outdoor fire ring, and the blog describes simple sleeping platforms for a couple of people side by side(4). Dry toilets at the maintained rest area complement the hut visit(1). If you want a longer outing than this tiny circuit, pick up Suurijärven luontoreitti or Jääkolun reitti from the same hub, or explore the broader Suurijärven vaellusreitistö toward more lean-tos and lookouts farther out.
For printable maps, seasonal access notes, and the long history of the Harjuntakasen area, start from the City of Pihtipudas Suurijärvi outdoor pages(1). Metsähallitus lists the same route family on Luontoon.fi under Suurijärven retkeilyreitistö(2). Peura Trail describes how Suurijärvi fits into the wider Peuran polku hiking system on the Suomenselä watershed(3). The Suurijärvi hiking trail network is about 34.8 km on our map as one continuous line in Pihtipudas. It is not a closed loop: the trail runs from near Yölammin tupa west of Muurasjärvi through Harjuntakasen nature reserve and the forests around Suurijärvi, with connections toward Peuran polku and Reisjärvi along the same marked network. Pihtipudas warns that some sections are new and can be hard to spot on the ground, that footing is rough and rocky in places, and that forest road surfaces vary—take care on motor roads(1). Early on you pass Poskeinen tulentekopaikka and the Kirves-Heikki area, with Kirves-Heikin nuotiopaikka and Kirves-Heikki tulentekopaikka beside Kuivajärvi canal—good places to stop before the track climbs into more remote ground. Nuorasen laavu and Harjuntakasen laavu sit on lake shores in the network described for Suurijärvi; the landscape mixes barren pine heaths, alder swamps, bogs, and small lakes and ponds. The open bog and water body called Multarinmeri is a named landmark in the area(1)(3). Further along, Kelkkämälammen lintutorni offers a raised view over the lake country. About 22 km into the route you reach Suurijärven kämppä, and Syväsalmen tupa lies further toward the eastern part of the line—both suitable for planning an overnight on a multi-day hike. The route shares the same trail infrastructure as shorter loops and links: Suurijärven luontoreitti, Jääkolun reitti, Kotajärven kierros, and the long Peuran polku runkoreitti E6, Pistopolku Yölampi near Yölammin tupa, and Raatejärvi - Mäntyjärven reitti branch off or share the same hubs, so you can combine day stages with shorter circuits when you want an easier day. In winter, roads to the trailheads are not regularly ploughed and the hiking trail itself is not maintained for snow; check the city’s pages before you go(1). Mobile coverage varies in the backcountry.
The Rapeikko Nature Trail is an easy, family-friendly walk of about 1.6 km just south of Pihtipudas along highway E75, in Central Finland. The loop returns to the trailhead through forest, meadow, and wetland, with red paint markings on trees and many interpretive boards on geology, forest types, and local wildlife. For winter grooming, the short overlap with the snowmobile track, and leash rules for dogs, start with the City of Pihtipudas Rapeikko page(1). Visit Pihtipudas walks through the interpretive sequence in more detail—Leijonien tervahauta, boardwalks to Sarvilampi, springs and mire, the lean-to and fire pit halfway, and the finish across Rapeikko farm meadow(2). Mika Markkanen’s Retkipaikka report adds practical notes on parking off Viitasaarentie 178, the unnamed gravel access road, and how the red or orange marks read on the ground(3). About halfway along the route, roughly 0.5 km from the start of the mapped trail, you reach Rapeikon luontopolun laavu with a fire pit, picnic table, woodshed, and dry toilets—natural pause points for a short outing. The same Ritovuori outdoor area links this walk to other routes: winter skiers use Louhurannan latu past Ritovuoren kuntoportaat and Ritovuoren ulkokuntoilupaikka, walkers follow Rapeikon yhteysreitti toward Sopukan senioripuisto and Pihtiputaan frisbeegolfrata, and a segment of Kolima-Alvajärvi moottorikelkkareitti shares the forest—choose the activity that matches the season and check official notices before you go. Underfoot you mostly follow old paths and forest roads; duckboards and small bridges carry the trail over wet ground. Rubber boots are a good idea when the mire is soft; in a dry summer the going is easy in ordinary walking shoes(1)(3).
For printable maps, winter access notes on forest roads, and background on the Harjuntakasen and Suurijärvi landscape, start from the City of Pihtipudas Suurijärvi outdoor pages(1). Metsähallitus publishes the wider route family on Luontoon.fi as Suurijärven retkeilyreitistö(2). Visit Pihtipudas summarises rental cabins, laavut, and practical trailheads in the same network(3). Manun kämppä polku is about 0.5 km and is not a loop: it is a short, very easy forest connector in Pihtipudas, Central Finland, within the Suurijärvi hiking area. It links directly into Suurijärven luontoreitti and Suurijärven vaellusreitistö, so you can combine it with the same lake-and-forest day loops that reach Nuorasen laavu, Yölammin tupa, Harjuntakasen laavu, and Suurijärven kämppä on longer outings. The municipality describes the wider network as paint-marked in places, occasionally faint on new alignments, and sometimes rough underfoot—expect typical forest path and rocky ground if you continue onto the main circuits(1). In winter, roads to Suurijärvi trailheads are not regularly ploughed and the hiking trails are not maintained for snow; check the city’s pages before you go(1). Mobile coverage varies in the backcountry(3). No dedicated trail-overview video for this short segment turned up in targeted searches; the network is best understood from the official maps and the longer Suurijärvi routes.
The trail is about 4.4 km on our map as a loop through Korppinen village near Pihtipudas in Central Finland. Visit Pihtipudas lists it as a nature and culture path with two natural starting options and points people to the birdwatching and observation tower plus a maintained lean-to with a fireplace on the hilltop(1). The City of Pihtipudas outdoor and nature listings repeat the same practical snapshot and send readers to Visit Pihtipudas for more detail(2). About 2.1 km along the loop, Kivimäen laavu and Ison Kivimäen näkötorni sit together on the high ground of Iso Kivimäki—good targets for a break, a fire, and broad views. Read more about the lean-to and tower on our dedicated place pages. Terrain mixes pine ridges, wetter spruce hollows, lake shores, and a lengthy ice-age boulder field where footing is slow and ankle-twists are easy; sources recommend sturdy footwear and, after rain, rubber boots for tall grass and seepage(1). Duckboards help through the worst stone jumbles(1). Reppuretkiä’s walk-through from the Korppinen side describes boulder “caves”, historic shoreline soils around Hoikkalampi and Syväjärvi, Telala’s old homestead clearings with meadow flowers, and the lookout’s long-distance vistas—useful colour if you want a feel for how the day unfolds(3).
For the latest visitor notes on shelters, camp rules, and how to reach the Heinäjoki boardwalks from Karjasillantie or Rasinahontie, start with Visit Pihtipudas’s Heinäjoki nature route page(1). Pihtipudas municipality groups the same outing under Heinäjoen luontoreitti on its outdoor nature destinations overview(2). Heinäjoki nature trail is about 1.8 km on our map as a flat, easy walk through the old Heinäjoki channel north of Pihtipudas village centre in Central Finland. From the Karjasillantie approach you soon reach Heinäjoen läntinen lintutorni above the reed-lined channel—Keski-Suomen lintutieteellinen yhdistys describes the western tower after roughly 500 m of duckboards from the “Heinäjoen luonto” gate, with a second, lower tower farther along the same walkway(4). About 1 km into the route you pass Eräpolun leikkipuisto, a local playground pocket that breaks up the outing for families. Near the eastern end, Heinäjoen itäinen lintutorni gives another vantage over the shallow, vegetation-rich streambed that links the Alvajärvi–Saanijärvi–Kolima lake chain(3). The path rides duckboards and short stairs through mire and riverside fringe, so it suits children on foot but not prams or wheels(1)(3). Keski-Suomen lintutieteellinen yhdistys flags the area for waterfowl, matching blog reports that mention swans, mergansers, divers, ducks, and even eagles when migration timing is right(3)(4). Out in the Nature’s spring visit still had deep snow on the platforms and notes heavy mosquitoes by early summer—binoculars and repellent are sensible(3). That write-up also explains how historic embankment works slowed Heinäjoki until repairs restored flow, which helps read the lush, grassy banks you see today(3). Independent sources describe longer foot loops using Rasinahontie, Reisjärventie, and Ruukintie past Saaninkoski and a 1924 Heinäjoki bridge for hikers who want a half-day valley tour beyond the signed boardwalk section(3); those road links are optional extensions, not required for the core 1.8 km bird-tower walk. Respect stay-on-platform guidance in wet sections. Open-fire rules differ by season: Visit Pihtipudas states there is no permission for an open fire at the lean-to during snow-free months, while still pointing to a covered rest spot and dry toilets along the official description(1). Out in the Nature directs summer cooking to the fireplace beside the wooden bridge and reminds readers to check Ilmatieteenlaitos warnings before lighting any fire(3). Dry toilets are attributed to the official stop layout rather than named individually in the narrative.
The Muurasjärvi nature and culture trail is about 1.9 km along Vuohtojärvi and Kelkkämäjoki in Pihtipudas, Central Finland—an easy lakeshore and streamside walk through the nationally listed cultural landscape around Muurasjärvi village. Keski-Suomen maaseutu recounts Muurasjärven kyläseura’s volunteer-led project with architect Siiri Turpeinen from autumn 2020 toward completion by the end of 2022: mostly gravel surfacing, duckboards on the wettest shorelines, footbridges over small Kelkkämäjoki rapids, a large laavu at Vuohtojärvi, a cleared viewing landing above the rapid for calmer bird watching, and planned village info points with boards on local history, culture, and nature(1). Muurasjärven luontosivut tie the same Suomenselä scenery to rich wetland birdlife at Vuohtojärvi and the Kelkkämäjoki estuary and note that Kelkkämä birds are easy to study from the pond’s tower(3). For the wider paint-marked hiking network that leaves Muurasjärvi toward Harjuntakanen nature reserve and Suurijärvi, with printable maps and winter access caveats, see the City of Pihtipudas Suurijärvi hiking pages(2). Near Reisjärventie you skirt the village sports cluster: Muurasjärven urheilukenttä, Muurasjärven leikkipuisto, Muurasjärven päiväkoti, Harjulinnan kuntosali, Antinhalli (Muurasjärven koulun liikuntasali), and Muurasjärven kaukalo. About 1.2 km from the usual start, Kelkkämälammen lintutorni sits above a lush pond; Keski-Suomen lintutieteellinen yhdistys lists it for water birds and describes driving access via Muurasjärvi church parking and a short walk along the power-line clearing(4). The culture trail connects in spirit and geography to Suurijärvi hiking trail network for multi-day forest trekking, while Muurasjärven kuntorata, Vuohtojärven laavun lenkki, and Muurasjärven valaistu latu share the same pond fringe for running and skiing seasons(2). The route was conceived as barrier-free village recreation; still bring shoes that cope with damp duckboards after heavy rain.
Louhuranta Nature Trail is a short hiking path in Pihtipudas in Central Finland, beside the Suvannonlahti lake basin. The City of Pihtipudas publishes an index of local nature destinations on its Luontokohteet pages, and Visit Pihtipudas rounds out ideas for accommodation and activities in the municipality(1)(4). The trail is about 1 km in total and is not a loop. It lies in the Louhuranta area where the Louhuranta nature reserve protects deciduous forest and a scenic shore meadow (rantalouhikko); kalapaikka.net notes the reserve sits a few kilometres south of Pihtipudas church and mentions regionally notable plants on the fresh, northern herb-rich forest site(2). The walking line stays close to the water and shoreline woods—useful for a quiet stretch after driving through the countryside. In the same municipality, the Suurijärvi hiking network is a separate, larger system with paint-marked routes and its own winter-service limitations on access roads(3). The winter-maintained ski track Jäälatu Pumppuranta–Suvannonlahti crosses near this hiking route roughly a kilometre from the start; it is a ski trail, not a summer walking substitute, but shows how the Pumppuranta–Suvannonlahti shore fits into local outdoor use.
Kehonpainolla toimivia kuntoiluvälineitä metsän keskellä.
Monipuolinen aikuisille suunnattuja kevyen vastuksen tarjoavia kuntoiluvälineitä.
Metallinen kuntoilu-/kiipeilyväline
Radan omistaa Muurasjärven Murto. 8 väylää. Lähtö Heikin-hallin takaa.
18-väyläinen suosittu monipuolinen metsärata, jossa jonkin verran korkeuseroja. Reitin varrella myös laavu ja tulipaikka. Pysäköinti reitin alussa.
120 askelmaa. Ei talvikunnossapitoa. Kulku Kolimantieltä sekä Ritovuorentien päästä kääntöpaikalta.
Radalla pistooli-, haulikko-, pienoiskivääri-, hirvi- ja 150 m kiväärirata.
6 ampumapaikkaa ilma-aseille (myös liikkuva ilmahirvi), elektroninen ampumalaite, jousiammunta.
Kiipeäminen omalla vastuulla.
Kiipeäminen omalla vastuulla.
Esteetön kulku.
Elämäjärventien varressa on parkkipaikka. Tornille johtaa 400-metrinen opastettu polku tien toiselta puolelta.
Parkkipaikka, josta opasteet
Asfalttipohjalla betonisiaesteitä yms. Scootit ja temppupyörät sallittu. Älä kuljeta hiekkaa alueelle. Ramppi, katos ja pöytäryhmä.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Pihtipudas.
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