A map of 472 sports and nature sites in Kuusamo.
This sauna can only be used when renting Näränkä vuokratupa.

The Kivilampi laavu is located near snowmobile, biking and cross country ski trails in Ruka-Kuusamo, next to Kivilampi pond.
Jussinkämppä kota
Porontimajoen myllytupa Porontimajoki's mill house
There is also a toilet in the area. Vennäänmutka laavu
Jussinkämppä autiotupa


Juhannuskallio day trail is a very short hiking trail of about 0.3 km in Kuusamo, North Ostrobothnia, on the flanks of Ruka next to the ski area. It lies in the Valtavaara–Pyhävaara nature reserve. The best place to start for official trail and reserve rules is the Juhannuskallio day trail page on Luontoon.fi(1). The trail leaves from Juhannuskallion parkkipaikka at the top of Juhannuskalliontie. In a few minutes of climbing you reach the open rocky top, look out over forest and fell scenery, and usually return the same way. The summit is about 469 m above sea level(3). In clear weather views can reach far across the landscape(3). This trail is a useful add-on to the dense Ruka trail network: it shares the parking with Rukan maisemareitti and Rukan kierros, sits at the end of the same forest road as Rukan esteetön reitti and Kivilammen lenkki, and Saaruan kuntorata passes the same parking area further along its loop. For a much longer forest walk or ride, Pyhän jyssäys connects nearby toward Pyhävaaran kota and the Pyhän jyssäys maastopyöräilyreitti variant. Finnish midsummer (Juhannus) gave the place its name, and people used to gather on the rock for midsummer festivities—something local accounts still associate with the outcrop(3). Travel writer Elina describes on elinanmatkalaukussa the drive from Ruka via the roundabout toward East Ruka (Itä-Ruka) and the final climb on Juhannuskalliontie; the path starts from Juhannuskallion parkkipaikka on the far side of the road from the Juhannuskallio sign(3). The seita photo blog notes that the path is rocky and steep in places—unlike the nearby wide barrier-free Ruka summit loop—so it is not ideal for mobility aids, but in winter the knoll is a popular snowshoe spot when there are beaten tracks(4). From 1 April to 15 August each year, Metsähallitus restricts movement on part of the Juhannuskallio area to protect nesting peregrine falcons. During that period you may still walk the marked guided hiking trail onto the hill, but you must not roam the cliff edge and slope outside what the restriction map allows(2). Metsähallitus has asked visitors to follow new signs and on-site markings that show the restriction zone(2). After mid-August, when chicks have fledged, wider access may open again according to reserve rules(2).
Ruka fell accessible trail is a very short route of about 0.2 km on Masto slope in Kuusamo, North Ostrobothnia. It starts from the Ruka ski area and reaches toward the Juhannuskalliontie trailhead zone, giving a wide, firm surface suited to wheelchairs and pushchairs so people with limited mobility can enjoy open fell views without taking the steeper footpath to Juhannuskallio summit. The hiking trails section on Ruka.fi(1) is the best hub for summer marking, the free Ruka-Kuusamo summer map from Ruka Info, and how this path fits among the trails around Pessari, Saarua, Ruka and Masto. Along the line, Rukan laskettelukeskus sits very close to where Rukan kierros, Rukan maisemareitti and the wider Rukan ympäristön maastopyöräilyreitit touch the network; a little further you pass Juhannuskallion parkkipaikka, the same free car park used by Rukan maisemareitti, Juhannuskallion päiväreitti, Saaruan kuntorata and Kivilammen lenkki. If you want a longer classic walk from the same corner, Rukan huippupolku and other marked day routes branch from the resort side. The seita photo blog contrasts this barrier-free Masto path with Juhannuskallion polku: the path up the rock is rocky and steep in places and is not meant for mobility aids, while the accessible route is for the snow-free season only because Juhannuskalliontie is not kept open as a winter driving route to the top in the same way as main resort roads(4). Large lift and slope projects on Masto can affect access. A Ruka.fi ski resort news article stated that the accessible route starting from the end of Juhannuskalliontie may close whenever active construction occupies that zone, while staying open for Midsummer and the Solstice festival period when possible(2). Check the latest ski-resort news on Ruka.fi before you travel because dates and work phases change. If you also walk the marked nature trail toward Juhannuskallio cliffs, remember that Metsähallitus restricts movement on part of the outcrop from 1 April to 15 August to protect nesting peregrine falcons; during that time you must stay on the signed hiking corridor and avoid the restricted cliff rim(3).
Värikallion kaarros is about 7 km of marked hiking in Hossa National Park, winding through pine heath and esker country to Lake Somerjärvi, where Finland’s northernmost Stone Age rock paintings face the water. Metsähallitus documents the route on Luontoon.fi(1), and Visit Suomussalmi gives trailhead driving directions and facility notes for the Somerjärvi rest area(2). Kuusamo is the nearest large municipality on our address register, and North Ostrobothnia is the region many travellers use when planning a Hossa visit. About a third of a kilometre from the start you reach Värikallio taukokatos ulkotulipaikka and Värikallio taukokatos, a sheltered cooking and break spot overlooking Somerjärvi, with Värikallio taukokatos käymälä nearby for dry toilets. From there the path climbs onto higher ground before dropping through a wet hollow on duckboards and stairs; Luontopolkumies describes the wetland crossings as well built(4). Roughly 1.3 km along, Ala-Ölkyn laavu gives a long lakeside pause on the Ala-Ölkky end of Somerjoki, next to AlaÖlkky laavu käymälä. This is the same corner where Julman Ölkyn polku meets the Julma-Ölkky service area, so many people pair this hike with a shorter Julma-Ölkky outing(4). Somerojoki hete, a small spring on Somerojoki, sits about 2 km from the start. The Somerjärvi shore section culminates at Lihapyörre laavu, Lihapyörre laituri, and Venelaituri Lihapyörre, where boats tie up beside lean-to and dock infrastructure. Visit Suomussalmi states that Somerjärvi has a cooking shelter, campfire site, woodshed, and dry toilet(2). From the keittokatos, a short spur crosses a steel footbridge to a viewing platform metres from the red-ochre figures on Värikallio; Visit Suomussalmi notes the paintings are dated about 3 500–4 500 years old and positioned so you view them almost at eye level from the structure(2). Unelmatrippi describes the boardwalk as steady and the figures as small triangular-headed human shapes and “stick elk” motifs that stand out once your eyes adjust(3). Toward the Lihapyörre parking end, Lihapyörre p-paikan käymälä serves the car and coach pockets: Lihapyörre pysäköintialue and Lihapyörre linja-autopysäköintialue lie within a few hundred metres of each other. The first part of the trail follows a wide, partly barrier-free path past Lihapyörre—the Suomus point where JulmaÖlkky - Somer - Hossa vesiretkeilyreitti, Lihapyörteen esteetön reitti, Kokalmus - Laukkujärvi, and the mountain-bike Sininen saavutus line all touch the same shore services. Luontopolkumies suggests allowing about three hours with generous snack stops on a busy autumn day and rates the outing as a moderate family-grade forest walk with the steepest pull after you leave the rock-art shelter(4).
Vaaranpolku Trail is about 3.3 km as a loop in Kuusamo, North Ostrobothnia, through Metsähallitus Näränkä Natural Forests toward the heritage Närängän erämaatila rental farm and two open rock viewpoints. Kuusamo sits on the edge of old-growth forest and bog country near the eastern border; this hike is a short but juicy sampler of that landscape. Start with the dedicated Vaaranpolku material on Luontoon.fi(1) for maps, difficulty notes, and current trail rules. Taipaleita’s walk-through is worth reading for how the gravel approach differs from the rock-and-root ridge sections, how orange blazes read in the forest, and how the ring returns past Suojärven tulipaikka(2). Retkipaikka’s longer stay at Närängän erämaatilan vuokratupa explains what overnight guests get from the farmhouse, sauna building, well, and meadow-edge campfire group—useful context even if you are only day-hiking past the yard(3). From Suojärven parkkipaikka the route uses a stabilised gravel track into older spruce forest before the character changes: duckboards bridge wet slants, and the tread around Kirkkokallio and Yheksänsylenkallen becomes rooty and rocky enough that Taipaleita echoes Luontoon.fi’s demanding rating because of the rolling elevation(2). About 0.4 km from the start, Suojärven tulipaikka makes an early break spot; Närängän sauna- ja liiteri, Närängän kaivo, Närängän tulipaikka, and Närängän erämaatilan vuokratupa cluster at the farm clearing roughly 2.7–2.8 km into the loop, with rental access handled through Metsähallitus booking rather than casual walk-in use of the buildings(1)(3). Above the farm, Kirkkokallio opens long sightlines toward the frontier forests, and the slightly lower Yheksänsylenkallio aims more toward the south and west; on clear days observers have picked out distant towers and even Kuusamo’s water tower from the ridges(2)(3). Taipaleita notes you can eye the boardwalk line of Hyöteikönsuon reitti slicing Hyöteikönsuo from the high rock—Hyöteikön katselulava on that connecting trail is the viewing platform hikers use on longer outings(2)(5). Near the southeast corner of the ring, Taipaleita highlights the protected karsikkopuu Niko with 1876 carved into the trunk as part of local bear folklore(2). When you are planning multi-route days, Retkiseikkailu lists Hyöteikönsuon reitti at roughly 3.5 km one way in the same Näränkä network as this 3 km-class loop(5). The trail is marked with posts and orange paint(2). No YouTube title passed the trail-specific confidence check, so video stays open until a clearer overview clip appears.
For the latest official information on this part of Finland’s best-known long-distance trail in Oulanka National Park, start with the Karhunkierros Trail page on Luontoon.fi(1). The City of Kuusamo notes that the full Karhunkierros is about 82 km from Hautajärvi toward Myllykoski and is often done over several days, but you can also walk it in shorter pieces as day hikes; the city also warns that Karhunkierros and Pieni Karhunkierros are not winter-maintained, so check weather and surface conditions before you set out(2). Karhunkierros.fi presents the whole trail as a long-distance classic through river valleys, gorges, and forests in Kuusamo and Salla(4). On our map this listing follows about 15.6 km of the Kuusamo end of the corridor as one hiking line. It is not a loop: you move along the marked main trail from the Konttainen parking area through forest and open fells toward the Myllykoski–Porontimajoki sector and Puurosuo. Near the start, Konttaisen kuhaus is a separate short circular day route that shares the same parking and signage cluster; In the Woods, Dear describes orange markings on Karhunkierros and green and orange markings on the Konttainen loop, plus the trailhead signposting from Virkkulantie(3). From Konttainen parkkipaikka, the first notable rest point along the main line is Kumpuvaaran laavu a few kilometres in—a natural place to pause before the trail dives deeper toward river scenery. Around the middle of this segment, Porontimajoen päivätupa, Porontimajoen laavu, and Porontimajoen keittokatos cluster at the Porontimajoki river, giving day shelter, a lean-to, and a cooking shelter for meal stops. Myllykosken päivätupa sits in the same broad Myllykoski area that anchors the southern end of the full Karhunkierros and links to Pieni karhunkierros, a shorter circular route that also passes Myllykosken päivätupa on its own line. Further along, Puurosuon laavut, Karhunkierros offers additional lean-to space on open bog and forest fringe before you leave this mapped segment. Kitkajoen koskimelontareitti runs parallel to walking trails in places along the Kitkajoki canoeing line—useful context if you are planning boating as well as hiking. The Koukkulampi–Viipus snowmobile route shares the Konttainen parking hub with summer hikers; respect separate seasonal use where posted. Kuusamo lies in North Ostrobothnia. Dry toilets are available at several stops together with the shelters; use the official pages for hygiene and any route notices before multi-day use(1)(2).
Kuntivaara Trail is about 1.4 km of marked hiking trail on the north-east edge of Kuusamo, on a quartzite fell beside the national border zone toward Russia. The path starts essentially at Kuntivaara kota, a wilderness kota that was rebuilt in late 2021 after a fire; the City of Kuusamo announced the new element kota for public use after inspections on 23 December 2021(2). The open kota, fire pit, firewood storage, viewing tower, and dry toilet described in METSO programme trail materials for the wider border-zone walking route still match what visitors expect at the top area today(4). For the Luontoon.fi listing that pairs with the same Kuntivaara destination under the closely related name Kuntivaaran polku, see Metsähallitus on Luontoon.fi(1). Kuusamo lies in North Ostrobothnia; this part of Koillismaa is remote from shops and fuel. Mobile coverage is patchy, so carry maps, spare clothing, and the usual basics even though the climb from parking to the summit area is short(5). The summit lies roughly 460 m above sea level in regional trail writing, with views toward Russia and old-growth spruce forest and mire features protected in the Natura 2000 mosaic along the way(4)(5). In winter the surroundings are heavily used by the maintained snowmobile network that links toward Kuntivaara; the city has documented large-scale track upgrading and the popularity of kelkka access and kota stops for riders(6). For summer drivers, sources still describe a small parking area some tens of kilometres beyond Kuusamo town toward the trailhead, then a straight-forward foot path to the top(5). On foot you can continue seamlessly into the city’s slightly longer Kuntivaaran polku walking route along the same ridge infrastructure, and the snowmobile routes Kuntivaara–Määttälänvaara and Kiviperä–Kuntivaara pass the same summit kota and lookout.

Kouvervaara Trail (Kouvervaaran reitti) is a marked linear summer route of about 43.2 km in northern Kuusamo, North Ostrobothnia, tying together Nuoriso- ja luontomatkailukeskus Oivanki, the Naatikkavaara–Kouvervaara hill area, and Tapiolanranta south of Lake Kesäjärvi toward Ruka. City of Kuusamo maintains signage and describes it as one continuous ribbon that mixes roughly 25 km of gravel road riding with about 18 km of forest-trail riding, also open to hiking and trail running(1). Red paint blazes supplement posts along the ground(1). The city’s broader cycling introduction calls it a demanding cross-country mountain-bike traverse with roughly 436 m of climbing through northern Kuusamo before finishing in the Ruka area(2). The Naatikkavaara–Kouvervaara sections rise and fall in earnest; officials expect riders to have basic mountain-biking technique and recommend a mountain bike even if other bikes can be pushed through on grit(1). About 10 km along, Könkäänniemen kota lies on the corridor, giving a kota stop and fireplace before the climbs deepen. City information lists the lay-bys Könkäänniemen tulipaikka, Kouvervaaran kota, and Kouverpuron laavu along the ribbon(1). Near 18 km the line crosses Oivanki’s activity campus: Oivangin hiihtomaa, Nuorisokeskus Oivangin frisbeegolfrata, Oivangin tenniskenttä, Oivangin leirikeskuksen pallokenttä, and the indoor gyms beside Nuoriso- ja luontomatkailukeskus Oivanki. From that cluster you can step onto the marked Oivangin kuntorata fitness loop if you want a shorter running-focused lap without leaving the area. Nuoriso- ja luontomatkailukeskus Oivanki promotes Welcome Cyclist services—secure bike storage, pump, and basic tools—for independent travellers between Kuusamo centre and Ruka(3). Farther north the trail threads forest roads and ridge crests before Kouverpuron laavu and Kouvervaaran kota offer another shelter pair as you descend toward lake country. Antti Luukkanen's Andyn blogi recounts an autumn mountain-bike day on the same corridor with duckboards right after the start, big views from the Kouvervaara crest, reindeer and black grouse along the way, and painfully slow root tangles in rainy peat that stretched total moving time toward six hours once detours and weather were factored in—useful real-world pacing for anyone planning nutrition(4). A contributor GPX on Jälki.fi for the wider Ruka–Kouvervaara–Oivanki variation warns that markings can thin around Petäjäsuo and that peat crossings beyond Monnonkangas may force improvisation even though Kuusamo keeps the core line marked(5). If you need rental bikes, repairs, or lift-access gear near the Ruka end, Lapland Ruka routes enquiries toward the partner desks and Ruka.fi lists each hire shop online(6)(7).
Sininen saavutus is an about 49 km marked mountain-bike loop through Hossa National Park in Kainuu, between Kuusamo and Suomussalmi. Metsähallitus publishes route information on the Sininen saavutus page on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Suomussalmi’s Sininen saavutus archive entry summarises the layout, lists principal lean-tos and day-use points, and links to a printable Metsähallitus brochure map(2). The circuit was named to the international IMBA EPICS list in the 2017 class of new long, mostly singletrack backcountry rides(3). Tapani Leppänen’s Latu&Polku article explains how mountain biking was written into the park plan from the beginning, with blue markings, maintained fireplaces, and options to shorten the day(4). Expect a demanding full day: IMBA Europe describes roughly four and a half hours as a minimum time for riders who already have general mountain-bike experience, on rolling esker terrain with many lake outlooks(3). Most riders start from Hossan luontokeskus beside Luontokeskus pysäköintipaikka. The first kilometres share the Huosilampi–Keihäslampi shore cluster with Harjujen huikonen and Hossan polku: jetties, Huosilampi invalaavu, campfire spots, and optional parking at Huosilampi pysäköintipaikka, Keihäslampi pysäköintipaikka, or Hossaari parkkipaikka. Around Pikku-Hossa, Pikku-Hossa vuokratupa, Pikku-Hossa ulkotulipaikka, and Laituri Pikku-Hossa sit near Huosivirta pysäköintipaikka and Huosivirta tulentekopaikka. Along Jatkonsalmi you pass Jatkonsalmi, Teräväpää vuokratupa and Jatkonsalmi, pääpirtti vuokratupa. Further along, Tolosenvirta vuokratupa, Lounaja tulentekopaikka, Lipposensalmen laavu, and Syrjäsalmi laavu break up long forest-and-lake sections. Aittojoki pysäköintipaikka supports an Aittojoki tulentekopaikka stop before the route swings toward Kokalmus laavu, Kokalmus tulentekopaikka, and Porotalli; Rytikangas pysäköintipaikka and Kirkasvetinen pysäköintipaikka open northern lakeshore riding toward Lihapyörre laavu and Laukkujärvi autiotupa. The southeast includes Puukkojärvi autiotupa, Puukkojärvi laavu, Hakokosken laavu, and Torkonluikea tulentekopaikka, then Iikoski parkkipaikka with Iikoski tulentekopaikat and Iikoski uimaranta keittokatos, IIKOSKI eräkämppä, and HUOSIUSJÄRVI eräkämppä before closing past Huosilampi laituri 3 and Huosilampi laituri 4 toward Öllöri laituri. MTBreitti.fi stage notes on the same 49 km circuit mention roots, duckboards, short forest-road connectors, and an asphalt finish toward the nature centre after Huosivirta when following their described lap(5). The route is marked in blue(2). Official materials describe one-way arrow guidance for a counter-clockwise sense of travel, although nothing physically blocks riding the other way—yield to hikers because tread is shared(4). Winter use follows separate maintained winter-bike corridors elsewhere in the park; this summer MTB loop is not groomed for winter riding(2).
Ruka Circuit (Rukan kierros) is a marked summer mountain-bike connection through the Rukatunturi outdoor area near Kuusamo. The trail is about 2.6 km as one continuous point-to-point line past Nordic ski-base corridors, maintenance roads, and forest paths. City of Kuusamo groups it with Kalliolampi loop, Ruka summit route, and Kivilampi lean-to loop as the core signed options that showcase every style of local riding(1). Terrain is described as technically easy overall, but elevation change on the fell still adds physical work(1). Brown mountain-bike pictograms and Rukankierros trail markers are used along the ground(4). About 0.6 km from the start you pass Rukan hyppyrimäki HS70 near the cross-country stadium pocket. Saaruan P-alue offers parking on the east side of the loop network roughly 1.7 km along; from here many riders link into Rukan ympärysreitti, the longer Rukan ympäristön maastopyöräilyreitit network, or Valtavaaran huiputus (keep in mind Valtavaara itself is managed for hikers—Lapland Ruka states summer biking there is no longer allowed)(2). Rukan laskettelukeskus sits near the 2.2 km mark—useful for lifts, services, and joining Rukan huippupolku or Rukan maisemareitti. The western approach reaches Juhannuskallion parkkipaikka at about 2.6 km; treat this as an access lot only. Juhannuskallio is a nature reserve where biking is completely prohibited, so continue on foot if you explore those trails(2). The resort destination maintains roughly 180 km of marked MTB routes across Ruka–Kuusamo with free brochures and digital maps; Lapland Ruka routes questions about rentals and day planning to Ruka Info(2). Ruka.fi aggregates reservation links for e-bikes, full-suspension bikes, fatbikes, and children’s fleets, and stresses early booking because summer demand is high(3). Some GPX exchanges publish a longer circuit around Rukatunturi under the same Finnish name with more climbing; if your downloaded trace differs, check signposted branches instead of assuming a single length(4).
Nissinvaaran reitti is a marked mountain-bike, trail-running, and walking route in Kuusamo, North Ostrobothnia, linking Petäjäkangas (the Tropiikki area), Nissinvaara, Kapustavaara, and the Mäkelä–Saapunki band. On our map it follows about 22.1 km as one continuous line; City of Kuusamo materials often describe the same tour as roughly 24 km, which reflects rounding or small variants along the marked circuit(1). For the latest on access, seasonal notes, and how the line is presented locally, start from the City of Kuusamo’s dedicated Nissinvaara trail page(1) and its wider cycling pages(2). The city characterises the riding as mostly easy forest riding, with clearer climbs and steeper passages around Kapustavaara where you should expect more elevation change(1). That makes it a practical place for newer mountain bikers to practise pace, braking, and line choice on wide forest roads before dipping into shorter path sections. A community GPS summary on Jälki.fi—worth skimming for on-the-ground texture—describes the corridor as mainly forest road with some enjoyable path segments and a swing along the edge of the golf course, and notes fatbikes handle the circuit comfortably(3). Along the line, the Nissinjoen tulentekopaikka offers a natural early stop on the Nissinjoki, while Kapustavaaran kota sits farther along for a longer lunch or shelter break. Approaching Mäkelä, the trace passes the Mäkelän koulun kota and the school outdoor cluster, handy if you want a late-loop pause near pitches and an ice-skating pad in winter maintenance season. The intended summer start is beside Petäjäkankaan kuntorata, near golf fairways 6 and 7—winter skiers use the same trailhead pocket for the Kapustavaara ski track(1). The route also lies on or alongside winter snowmobile corridors that Kuusamo maintains for motorized winter travel; in summer those alignments read as wide, easy rolling.
These marked summer mountain-bike trails around Rukatunturi in Kuusamo, North Ostrobothnia, are about 15.5 km as one continuous point-to-point line through the village-side outdoor belt. City of Kuusamo describes the wider Ruka surroundings cycling family as combining Rukan kierros, Kalliolammen kierros, the summit connection, and the Kivilampi lean-to loop—rides that use ski-track bases, maintenance corridors, and forest paths(1). The riding is characterised as technically easy overall, but the fell’s elevation changes still add serious workout(1). Lapland Ruka positions the destination as part of roughly 180 km of marked mountain-bike mileage across Ruka–Kuusamo, with brochures and online mapping available alongside resort services(2). About 2.6 km from the start you reach Saaruan P-alue on the Saarua side of the network. That lot is a natural meeting point for riders linking Rukan kierros, the pedestrian Rukan ympärysreitti, or Valtavaaran huiputus. Treat Valtavaara itself as hiking-focused only—Lapland Ruka states summer cycling there has not been permitted since 2021 because sections of ground cannot sustain wheels(2). As you roll toward the fell base near 5 km, the line passes maintenance roads and trail links close to Rukan hyppyrimäki HS70, Rukan ulkokuntoilupaikka outdoor gym, Rukatontun talviuintipaikka, Ruka DiscGolfPark, and RukaGym—busy resort infrastructure rather than remote wilderness. Past roughly 8 km the route bends near Rukan koulun lähiliikunta-alue and the school’s outdoor rinks and ball fields—useful orientation if you are joining families or looping toward lake-side snowmobile corridors that share the fringe of the village map. Near 10.6 km you come to Juhannuskallion parkkipaikka, which feeds short hiking spurs such as Rukan maisemareitti, Juhannuskallion päiväreitti, and the compact Kivilammen lenkki MTB link. Juhannuskallio is a strict nature reserve with a total ban on cycling; leave bikes at the parking approach and continue on foot if you explore those paths(2). The run finishes close to Rukan laskettelukeskus, where Bike Park lifts, rental desks, and routes like Rukan huippupolku make it easy to extend the day on the hill(2). Nearby, Pyhän jyssäys is a separate marked mountain-bike loop on Pyhävaara with reinforced gravel and boardwalk sections—stay on the structures where posted because detours damage sensitive plants(2). Writers at Lähdetään taas report e-fatbike laps around the fell and Pyhän jyssäys, emphasising how steep the climbing feels without assistance and recommending advance booking when you want an electric assist from busy village hire desks such as Sport House Ruka(4)(5).
Alueella myös käymälä.
Alueella myös kompostikäymälä. Merenoja tulentekopaikka
Ansakämppä tulentekopaikka
Lappset Oy:n laitteet: Fitness Box S, M ja L, Jumper, Battling ropes ja backn Abs Gym Park Equipmentsin laitteet: CrossPark-monitoimilaite sekä 5 D -yhdistelmälaite (rintapenkki, ylätalja,air walker, jalkaprässi sekä koko kehon venytys).
Paljon korkeuseroja.
Paljon korkeuseroja.
Paljon korkeuseroja.
Tasainen maasto.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Kuusi väylää. Väyläpituudet 35-82 m.
80 askelmaa.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Kuusamo.
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