A map of 174 sports and nature sites in Tammela.
This sauna can only be used if you rent the Hyypiö rental cabin. It is located 50 meters from the cabin on Lake Kyynäränjärvi in
Venesilta Camping Area Sauna is free for huest nbut also open to the public for only 5€. You can also rent a private family sauna at a reasonable price.
Liesjärvi's village hall sauna is a wood burning sauna in Liesjärvi village and managed by the community. It can be rented out to the public.
A Smoke sauna on Lake Kyynäräjärvi that can hold 5-8 people. It can only be used if you are renting the Hyypiö rental cabin (200 meters from the house): https://www.nationalparks.fi/hyypiorentalhut
Eerikkilä is a resort on Lake Ruostejärvi. They offer public sauna shifts.Even if you are not staying there, you can pay to just use the sauna. They also have private saunas you can rent. You can read more about the private ones here: https://eerikkila.fi/eerikkila/tilat/saunat-ja-ajanviettotilat/
You can rent a cabin & also a sauna from Wahren-opisto college. The beach sauna is open to everyone to use for only 4€ & 1€ for children.
The restaurant rents out a sauna on Lake Suujärvi. They offer the option to serve you food and have an additional menu for that. You can bring your own drinks
There is a free public sauna open to everyone located in Ruostejärvi camping and recreation area.

There is a hut that is free to use to grill
A laavu on Ilvesreitti or retkeilyreitistö & Meidän metsäpolku hiking trail.
Along the outdoor route.
Along the nature trail.
A hut on Peukaloisen polku hiking trail

For maps, service listings, and background on Ruostejärven virkistysalue, start with Luontoon.fi(1). Day-to-day details on the Toralahden cable ferry, beach services, and how the area ties into longer walks are summarised on Hämeen virkistysalueyhdistys’s Ruostejärvi page(2). Our Forest Trail is a short forest walk on that recreation area in Tammela, Kanta-Häme. The trail is about 1,5 km one way between the main shore area and the Toralahd side; many visitors walk out and back along the same path for roughly 3 km round trip(4). From the beach and parking side, the path threads through birch and pine with bog-myrtle thickets and sections of duckboards over wet ground(3)(4). About 1,2 km in you reach Ruostejärven laavu beside the narrows of Toralahden, where Hämeen Ilvesreitti meets the local network—continue west toward Liesjärvi national park on that system when you want a multi-day extension(5). The hand-drawn cable ferry (Föri II) operates across the narrows in ice-free conditions so you can reach the lean-to on the far shore without swimming(2)(3)(4). Clustered at the shore near Ruostejärven laavu are Ruostejärven uimaranta, Ruostejärven sauna, and Ruostejärven Grill Hut—handy for a swim, sauna, or picnic after the walk(2). Further along the line, Ruostejärven virkistysalueen uimaranta on the north shore and Lapinniemenmäen laavu bookend the short stretch through the wooded promontory; Myllylahden laavu sits deeper in the forest toward the Eerikkilä sport-institute side and suits longer combinations if you link other marked paths(3). The surface is a narrow footpath and duckboards rather than a wide crush gravel road; Retki ja Reissu notes the short marked loops combine nicely into a longer outing and that many paths are pleasant on a mountain bike as well as on foot(3). Hämeen virkistysalueyhdistys mentions occasional noise from nearby Highway 2; that is worth bearing in mind on still days(2). Tammela is an easy outing from Helsinki, Tampere, or Turku, and Ruostejärvi remains a popular family beach and day-hike hub(4).
The Suokukkapolku demanding accessible trail is a short boardwalk-based walk of about 0.7 km one way on Kiljamo islet at the heart of Torronsuo National Park in Tammela, Kanta-Häme. Luontoon.fi classifies it as a demanding accessible route: surfaces and gradients are built for assistive devices, but the physical character means many wheelchair users should plan on an outdoor-savvy assistant(1). Visit Häme groups it with other Kanta-Häme barrier-free introductions and repeats the reminder to read the full trail sheet before setting out(2). Practical staging is built for a slow visit. You start from Kiljamo pysäköintialue, Torronsuo (with Kiljamo parkkipaikan laajennus beside it), walk roughly a few hundred metres of gentle incline toward Kiljamo nuotiokatos and Kiljamo tulentekopaikka—the covered cooking shelter and campfire point sit together as Kiljamo’s main break area with an accessible dry-toilet setup nearby(2)(3). About a third of a kilometre from the parking side you reach Kiljamo luontotorni, the nature tower overlooking the open bog, which pairs well with a pause before you retrace steps or link into longer duckboard loops(3). If you want more distance on duckboards, Suotaival continues across the mire for several kilometres, Kiljamonkierros loops close to the Kiljamo services, and Torron kylän reitti heads toward Torro village landscapes; the very short Suopursupolku accessible boardwalk shares the same parking focus for a minimal alternative(2). Jouni Palén’s Torronsuo accessibility overview on Retkipaikka explains how two accessible viewing platforms at Kiljamo connect with a narrow twin-plank duckboard and warns that frost and freeze–thaw cycles can make any boardwalk surprisingly slick(3).
For terrain, services in Liesjärvi National Park, and how this corridor fits the wider network, start with the Ruostejärvi–Liesjärvi section on Luontoon.fi(1). The Häme Lynx Trail (Hämeen Ilvesreitti) is a regional hiking network in southern Finland; Hämeen virkistysalueyhdistys describes roughly 273 km of marked walking routes linking forests, lakes, and the national parks around Kanta-Häme(2). On our map this feature is about 8.2 km as a point-to-point walk in Tammela toward Liesjärvi National Park. It is not a loop. About 4.5 km along you reach Kettumäen tulentekopaikka, where the route meets the longer Ilvesreitti hiking trail. From there the line continues toward the Peukalolammi area: parking at Metsäkouluntie and at Peukalolamminkangas (including a coach bay), then Peukalolammi laavu beside the lake, and the Peukaloinen rental hut cluster with a fireplace and dry toilets nearby. Carry water and plan fires responsibly; Etureppu Outdoors’ multi-day Hämeen Ilvesreitti journal notes that not every rest spot has firewood or drinking water, so self-sufficiency matters on longer legs(3). The City of Tammela highlights Liesjärvi and Torronsuo national parks as core destinations for visitors, with accessible and nature trails described on the municipality’s outdoor pages(4). Visit Häme summarises the official 24 km Ruostejärvi–Liesjärvi variant as conifer forest, ridges, and lake shores with boardwalks and rest places(5)—useful context even when you only hike this shorter segment. Kanta-Häme offers varied day and overnight options on the wider network; this segment suits a half-day outing focused on the Peukalolammi end of the park.
The Häme Lynx Trail (Hämeen Ilvesreitti) is a large marked network across the Häme Lake Uplands; for the full route system, start with Metsähallitus on Luontoon.fi(1) and the trail hub from Hämeen Virkistysalueyhdistys(2). Visit Häme overview adds section character, multi-day framing, and notes on hiking, mountain biking, and trail running on the wider network(3). This mapped hiking segment is about 91 km point-to-point in Tammela and Kanta-Häme. It ties together lake shores, forested ridges, and parts of the Liesjärvi national park context before trending northeast toward the northern end of the line on our map. Early on you pass Ruostejärvi recreation: Ruostejärven uimaranta, Ruostejärven laavu, Ruostejärven Grill Hut, and swimming and sauna infrastructure near the shore, plus a short local link on Meidän metsäpolku through the same area. Hämeen Virkistysalueyhdistys describes a rope ferry across a narrow bay at Ruostejärvi in the ice-free season and parking access from Härkätie—details worth confirming on their Ruostejärvi pages(2). Eerikkilä Sport and Outdoor resort sits beside the trail; the line touches many of its outdoor pitches and halls, but for hiking planning the shoreline lean-tos, Myllylahden laavu about 14.5 km into the segment, and onward forest connections matter more than the individual courts. Beyond Ruostejärvi the route reaches Tittilammin laavu and the reservable cook shelter at Tittilammi, then Siltalahti valkama with Siltalahti tulipaikka and harbour facilities, Hyypiö vuokratupa with Hyypiö tulipaikka and Hyypiö kämppä savusauna, and Harjunpirtti sauna beside Harjunpirtti kaivo—practical clusters for a long day into the Liesjärvi landscape. Pirttilahti parkkipaikka offers parking roughly 24 km from the start; further on, Metsäkouluntie parkkipaikka Liesjärvi and Peukalolamminkangas pysäköintialue 1 linja-autot support access into the national park from the Hyypiö and Peukaloinen trail area, with Peukaloinen vuokratupa and Peukalolammi laavu nearby. Onkimaan kaivo and the ONKIMAA wilderness hut mark a stretch with backcountry services before the line turns toward Iso-Melkutin: Kaitajärvi pyräköintialue, Kaitajärven laavu, and Kaitajärven tulipaikka sit near the lake end, then Iso-Melkutin Lepakkolaavu and the Iso-Melkuttimen laavu pair frame the popular clear-water lake shore. The route shares alignment with the shorter Iso-Melkutin lake circuit and the Iso-Melkutin–Kaitajärvi bike connector. Räyskälän talviuintipaikka appears as you leave the tight lake terrain. The segment ends near Heinisuon laavu ja nuotiopaikka and Heinisuo P-alue close to a winter ski loop connection. Trail users describe yellow Ilves markers and lynx-themed signs that are easy to follow in the field(4). A weekend trip report from south of Räyskälä highlights lakeside paths, duckboard crossings that demand care when wet, and busy lean-tos at Iso-Melkutin—useful colour on pacing and crowds in peak season(4). Independent field guides summarize camping rules by land category, berry and mushroom picking, where cycling is restricted in national parks, and the importance of using official fireplaces when fire warnings allow(5). Maintenance of the wider network has relied on limited volunteer capacity; check official pages for temporary re-routes or construction(2).
Häme Lynx Trail (Hämeen Ilvesreitti) is Kanta-Häme’s long-distance hiking network, coordinated by Hämeen virkistysalueyhdistys together with municipalities since 1990. For maps, section descriptions and notices, the association’s Hämeen Ilvesreitti pages are the main planning resource(1). The Ruostejärvi recreation area describes how the beach, lean-to and paths link into multi-day hikes toward Liesjärvi and Saari(2). Visit Häme’s Ruostejärvi–Saari page covers forest paths, Niinimäki wetlands and Kaukolanharju views toward Saaren kansanpuisto(3). The same regional listing’s Ruostejärvi–Liesjärvi national park text adds Myllylahden laavu, Tapola branches and Onkimaanjärvi(4). Metsähallitus lists the full marked network on Luontoon.fi(5). Retkipaikka’s weekend sampler along Ilves stages notes yellow markings and boardwalk care after rain(6). The trail is about 53.3 km as one continuous line in Tammela. Official materials describe the wider Ilves system at roughly 250–273 km with many day loops and links, so your distance depends on which branches you walk. From Ruostejärvi, Ruostejärven laavu, Ruostejärven uimaranta, Ruostejärven sauna and Ruostejärven Grill Hut sit together at the recreation shore; a cable ferry crosses the narrowest part of the bay when ice-free(2). The route then passes through the Eerikkilä Olympic training centre grounds—Eerikkila Public Sauna and Eerikkilän talviuintipaikka offer services beside the path, while Lapinniemenmäen laavu sits a little farther along the forest shore. Around Myllylahden laavu the path meets Härkätie crossings described in official section texts(4). Near Saaren kansanpuisto, Lounais-Hämeen Pirtti Sauna, Kuivajärven uimapaikka, Suujärven uimapaikka and Saaren kansanpuiston laavu cluster with beaches and shelter options(3). Toward Liesjärvi national park, Kettumäen tulentekopaikka and Metsäkouluntie parkkipaikka Liesjärvi support access into forest and mire landscapes(4). Tervalamminsuon pysäköintialue is a parking access point before the final push to ONKIMAA at Onkimaanjärvi’s north shore(4). Tammela lies in Kanta-Häme. The route overlaps Pyöräillen Hämeessä Härkätietä pitkin, Häme in places; check whether you are on a hiking-only subsection before planning a bike(3).
For national park rules, services, and Metsähallitus guidance for this exact loop, start with the Punatulkun polku page on Luontoon.fi(1). Tammela gathers day-trip ideas and links to the official Luontoon hubs for its national parks on Retkelle Tammelaan(4). Luontopolkumies on Retkipaikka describes the red markings, counter-clockwise habit, mossy ridges, Taipaleensuo duckboards and gravel, the crossing toward Lehdos parkkipaikka, and how Punatulkun polku overlaps Pohjantikan polku on shared segments near Korteniemi(2). Out in the Nature adds English driving notes from highway 2, a picnic table at Lehdos, spring conditions on the pine-forest shore approach to Korteniemi, and clear advice to keep dogs leashed near wildlife like adders(3). Punatulkku trail is about 3.2 km on our map as a loop in Liesjärvi National Park in Tammela, Kanta-Häme. It is marked in red and is the usual short counterpart to the longer blue Pohjantikan polku departing from Korteniemi parkkipaikka; many visitors walk one loop after the other or link junctions for a roughly 6 km combination(2)(3). The terrain stays gentle—only small relief steps—though fallen trunks can slow you briefly(2). After Perkonlahti the red branch follows signs toward Lehdos; farther on, Taipaleensuo mixes boardwalk and surfaced track before the trail returns through räme fringing Lake Liesjärvi and a bog-rosemary point hikers call Levousnokka in on-trail signage(2). The shore and moss sections are strong reasons to choose this loop when you want lakeside air without the rougher footing common on the blue route(2)(3). Facilities cluster at Korteniemi: Korteniemi parkkipaikka, Korteniemi tulipaikka for a fire break, and Korteniemi uusi kaivo for water sit a short walk apart along the loop as our map orders them(2). Lehdos parkkipaikka on Korteniementie is the handiest start if you want to follow Out in the Nature’s counter-clockwise suggestion straight onto the red loop(3). The yellow Ilvesreitti crosses the same trail hub for multi-day connections, and the green Ahonnokan luontopolku offers a very short circuit from Korteniemi when you need a minimal add-on(2)(3). Korteniemi heritage farm beside the main parking is a summer open-air destination with animals and buildings managed by Metsähallitus; opening and accessibility details belong on their visitor pages rather than here(3).
Torro Village Route is about 9.6 km of hiking in Torronsuo National Park in Tammela, Kanta-Häme. It is the park’s longest marked summer walking route from the Kiljamo service area: raised-bog duckboards, forest paths, and a stretch through Torro village and past old quarry scenery described in regional guides, with links into the wider Häme Lynx Trail where routes meet. Metsähallitus publishes maps, rules, and season notes for all Torronsuo trails on the national park hiking and outdoor recreation pages on Luontoon.fi(1). Retkipaikka(2) summarises Kiljamo and Pehku parking along the Forssa–Somero road, birdlife and berry picking, and notes that the long village circuit was rerouted to keep walkers mainly off busy road verges. Reppuretki(3) describes the feel of the duckboards—wide mire views from Kiljamo nature tower, soundscapes of cranes and smaller birds in spring, and why boardwalk maintenance matters on fragile bog. The hike begins at the Kiljamo trail hub beside Kiljamo tulentekopaikka. From the same junction you can step onto short connecting trails without extra driving: Suopursupolku esteetön and Suokukkapolku esteetön add accessible boardwalk spurs, and Kiljamonkierros is an easy shorter ring before committing to the long circuit. Suotaival is the other major summer path from Kiljamo toward the open bog. Along the Torro Village Route you pass Torronsuo Pehkun pysäköintialue roughly two thirds of the way around—Pehku is the park’s second car park on the same regional road and often has more room when Kiljamo fills on peak weekends(2). Nearer the Kiljamo end you return past Kiljamo pysäköintialue, Torronsuo, Kiljamo parkkipaikan laajennus, Kiljamo nuotiokatos, and Kiljamo luontotorni; the 17-metre nature tower is the obvious landmark above the tree tops for orientation and birdwatching. Terrain is classic southern raised bog: long duckboard sections, occasional dry forest path, and short road or forest connectors where the marked line leaves the open mire. Allow half a day including breaks and time on the tower. Tammela is a practical base for visiting the park; Kanta-Häme offers many linked outdoor areas if you extend your trip.
For national park rules, firewood, pets, and the latest service information for this part of Liesjärvi, Metsähallitus publishes the Liesjärvi National Park hub on Luontoon.fi(1). The Municipality of Tammela describes arrival at the Peukalolamminkangas parking area, including navigation notes for Kanteluksentie and signing from highway 2, on its Peukalolammin–Kaksvetinen accessible route page(2)—useful even if you are walking the yellow-marked circuit rather than the parallel wheelchair-friendly loop. Retkitassut recounts an easy hour-long outing with dogs in May 2020, noting yellow blazes, many duckboards, and active maintenance on some boardwalk sections near Kaksvetinen(3). Sikomäki Trail is about 4.2 km on our map in Liesjärvi National Park in Tammela, Kanta-Häme. From Sikomäki pysäköintialue the path quickly reaches Kaksvetinen kota and Kaksvetinen tulentekopaikka on rock, a natural first stop and the same corner where the long yellow Ilvesreitti passes through—handy if you want to imagine longer hikes toward the wider park network. The middle of the circuit focuses on Peukalolammi: Peukalolammi laavu, a campfire spot tied to Peukaloinen vuokratupa, and another campfire spot beside the rental cabin sit within a short walk of one another, with Peukalolamminkangas pysäköintialue 1 linja-autot, Peukalolamminkangas pysäköintilalue 2, and Sikomäki pysäköintialue offering parking and turn-around space for cars and buses. Dry toilets are available near the Kaksvetinen rest area and beside the Peukaloinen vuokratupa–Peukalolammi laavu cluster. Completing the loop, Katavalammintien levähdyspaikka makes a simple bench stop before Tittilammi varauskeittokatos (katos lukittava) and Tittilammin laavu sit together at the north-western side of the small lake—check booking rules for the locked cooking shelter on Metsähallitus material(1). Overall the profile is gentle forest walking with frequent duckboards through damp ground; Retkitassut found the going pleasant and easy to follow(3).
Lappset SISU -tuotteet sisältävä liikunta-alue. Laitteina penkkipunnerrus, pystypunnerrus, selkä-/vatsapenkki sekä jalkakyykky (4/2023).
18-väyläinen A1-tason frisbeegolfrata.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Pituus 31 m, leveys 2,5 m Etenemä 38 cm, nousu 16 cm Askelmia 75 kpl, kokonaisnousu 12 m Led-valaistus, sähköinen kävijälaskuri
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Tammela.
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.