A map of 106 sports and nature sites in Kristiinankaupunki.
Pyhävuori Söderbergsrundan is about 2.2 km as a point-to-point hiking segment on Pyhävuori in Kristiinankaupunki, southwest Finland’s highest coastal hill area northeast of the town centre. The climb is modest by fell standards but the ice-age boulder fields, small gorges, and cliff-backed lookouts are easy to reach on marked paths shared with the wider Bötombergen network. Visit Kristinestad describes Pyhävuori as roughly 15 km northeast of the centre, with three official summer walking colour routes marked on trees from the ski-leisure base, plus winter skiing and sledging(1). Bötombergen-Pyhävuori IF Länken Ski runs the leisure centre as the usual summer start for marked hikes: it lists separate Saunanseinä (about 3.6 km) and Susi (about 8.5 km) named loops, a swimming beach, shared grill shelters, and guided trips on request(2). Along this segment you pass Pyhävuoren laskettelukeskus near the northern end, Pyhävuoren uimapaikka with its small beach after a few minutes on foot, and Pyhävuoren ulkokuntosali ja kuntoportaat for fitness stairs and outdoor gym gear beside Karijoentie. Dry toilet service at Etelävuori lies near the southern end of this segment. The marked Pyhävuoren valaistu kuntorata joins almost immediately; farther south the longer Pyhävuoren retkeilyreitit summer trail and Pyhävuoren ladut ski trail share the same hill infrastructure, so it is simple to lengthen a visit once you are on site. Retkeilyä Satakunnassa ja muualla Suomessa walked the blue-only loop counter-clockwise Etelävuori-first, highlighting pirunpelto boulder fields, Bastuväggen “sauna cliff” faces, a lean-to, and wide ski-base walking elsewhere—terrain that matches what most hikers report from Pyhävuori outing posts(3). Lappfjärds Byaförening notes five marked walks from about 850 m up to 8.5 km through devil’s fields and rare Siberian clematis stands first found in Finland here in the late 1940s(6). Pyhävuori also sits on the larger Forntida bergen / Muinaisvuori ancient-mountains corridor toward Susiluola; Visit Suupohja summarizes how that long-distance concept links several municipalities’ exercise trails and winter ski tracks(5). For PDF maps and the refreshed 2025 Bötombergen hiking-and-biking sheet, City of Kristinestad publishes links from its hiking-trails index(4). Kristiinankaupunki offers seaside Cittaslow charm when you combine a short hill outing with old wooden quarters and the Bothnian Sea shore. Check Visit Kristinestad and the leisure-centre pages before you go for ski-lift hours, café days, and any slope maintenance that might affect parking(1)(2).
Paarmanninvuori–Susiluola nature trail is about 1.3 km on our map: a short, marked hiking link on the forested ridge between the Susiluola Wolf Cave area and the Paarmanninvuori sports hill on the Kristiinankaupunki–Karijoki border in South Ostrobothnia. Kristiinankaupunki is the Ostrobothnian coastal city whose territory includes Susivuori and Susiluola; Karijoki shares the same ridge and runs visitor services and hill facilities on the Paarmanninvuori side. Metsähallitus lists this route on Luontoon.fi as part of its national outdoor trail catalogue(1). The City of Kristiinankaupunki describes Susiluola as Finland’s key Palaeolithic cave site, fenced for safety and research, with a roughly 500 m approach path past a rock garden, Bronze Age burial, and boulder field(2). The Municipality of Karijoki notes that Paarmanninvuori rises above Karijoki centre with Paarmannin maja, a dance pavilion, ski jumps maintained by Karijoen Tappara, jogging routes, and a lit fitness trail in the same outdoor cluster(3). From the Susivuori end, the walk soon reaches Susivuoren näkötorni. Lauhanvuori–Hämeenkangas UNESCO Global Geopark explains that a path toward the lookout branches left from the Wolf Cave area and crosses rocky ground in places(4). Retkeile Lakeuksilla adds that short connectors near the cave can be rooty and stony underfoot even though the overall grade is easy, and that winter maintenance is not provided for this style of nature access(5). Taikapolku’s on-the-ground notes from the stone park toward the Susiluola kota describe sandy forest tracks and the mix of cultural and natural stops—worth reading if you want a relaxed narrative of the wider Susivuori slopes(6). About 1.2 km from the start you reach the Paarmanninvuori service area where Paarmanninvuoren ilma-aserata, Paarmanninvuoren hiihtomaja, and Paarmanninvuoren hyppyrimäet K37/K17/K7 sit along Kristiinantie. The same corner connects to Susiluolan kiertoreitti for a slightly longer walking loop, and to Paarmannin hiihtomajan valaistu latu and Paarmannin hiihtomajan valaistu kuntorata when you want lit ski or running tracks after your hike(3)(4).
Norrfjärden–Tegelbruksbacken nature trail is about 6 km on the map as one line through the bilingual coastal town of Kristinestad, tying Pohjoislahti and the Tiilitehtaanmäki brickworks hill beside Norrfjärden. Ostrobothnia is the wider region. For printable maps and the municipal trail list, start with the City of Kristinestad’s hiking routes page(1); Visit Kristinestad’s Outdoor Active hub is useful for on-screen routing(5). Kristinestads historia hosts a long illustrated article on the same shore that mixes ecology and trail engineering—bridges, grazing, land uplift, and how Metsähallitus (Finnish Forest Centre) markings and the Natura 2000 meadows on Tegelbruksbacken fit together(2). Retkipaikka’s report by Jorma Murto stresses how easy the tread is for families: shore woods, pastures, duckboards, and the suspension bridge over Tiukanjoki as a clear highlight(3). From the northern end you can start from Pohjoislahti pysäköintialue 1; within the first kilometre the path brushes the Köydenpunojankatu sports block—Keskustan jääkiekkokaukalo Kristiinankaupunki, Keskustan tekonurmikenttä, Kristiinankaupungin tenniskenttäalue, and Keskustan luistelukenttä Kristiinankaupunki sit just off the line. Pohjoislahden pysäköintialue is another practical access point a little farther along, with wider shore views toward Norrfjärden. Mid-route, Tiilitehtaanmäki pysäköintialue and the Itäpuolen urheilukeskuksen frisbeegolfrata and Itäpuolen urheilukeskuksen pallokenttä mark the eastern sports campus. The forested Tiilitehtaanmäki end focuses on Tiukanjoki: Tiilitehtaanmäki Tiukanjoki tulentekopaikka and Tiilitehtaanmäki Tiukanjoki polttopuusuoja - kuivakäymälä cluster at the resting place near the suspension bridge, with dry toilet and firewood shelter as described for visitors making coffee stops(3). Terrain alternates between gravel-topped tread and wooden duckboards on wet ground; occasional broader sections allow several hikers abreast(2). Blue marks on tree trunks are the main guidance, with some red-marked optional spurs that Retkipaikka notes as slightly more demanding(3). Boardwalk renewal and service-structure upgrades were in the news when Svenska Yle covered planned gravel surfacing instead of some wooden walkways and future bird-tower work—check the city’s pages for what is live today(4). Winter travellers should expect icy boardwalks and ordinary coastal weather. Kristiinankaupunki is a good base for a half-day outing: cafés and the wooden town are a short walk from several access points when you combine town streets with the nature tread(1)(2).
For the cave fence, kota and toilet practical details, driving directions to Susiluola parking, and how the marked path reaches Susivuoren näkötorni, start with the Lauhanvuori–Hämeenkangas Geopark’s Susiluola and Susivuori pages(1). Karijoki summarizes why the cave matters for Finnish Ice Age archaeology and visitor interest(2). Kristinestad.fi gathers Kristiinankaupunki’s wider hiking-trail links and Outdooractive route browsing in one place(4). Susiluola circuit trail is about 1,6 km on the forested Susivuori ridge between Kristiinankaupunki and Karijoki in South Ostrobothnia. Early on you pass Susivuoren näkötorni, where the Geopark describes open views toward the Bothnian Sea and nearby settlements; the climb from the cave side can feel rocky in places(1). Farther along, the line reaches Paarmanninvuoren hiihtomaja at Kristiinantie 167—a good landmark if you plan to combine hiking with the facilities around Paarmanninvuori. The route aligns with Paarmanninvuori-Susiluola luontopolku where that nature trail sits on the same ridge, and winter-focused visitors often use Paarmannin hiihtomajan valaistu latu or Paarmannin hiihtomajan valaistu kuntorata right beside the ski lodge when snow and grooming schedules suit skiing or fast walking. Askeleita Suomessa notes easy overall walking with a bit of uphill toward the cave and reminds that Susiluolantie winter maintenance may fail in snow; in one winter visit they walked extra distance from Karijoentie when the car route was not kept open(3). Susiluola itself is fenced: you look through the wire mesh while a switch by the fence powers interior lighting described on the Geopark pages(1). The same source asks visitors to pack toilet paper for the dry toilet. Neighbouring Pyhävuori and the wider Muinaisvuoret trail network offer longer day loops if you want to extend beyond this ridge segment.
Tasainen maasto.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Kuntoportaissa 180 askelmaa, pituus 110 m, nousua 30 m.
Toiminnanharjoittaja Lappfjärdnejdens jaktvårdsförening.
Tornin korkeus
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Kristiinankaupunki.
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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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