A map of 78 sports and nature sites in Maalahti.
ANYONE can use this sauna. It is on the island of Fäliskäret which is in the Kvarken Archipelago (Merenkurkun saariston) (Kvarkens skärgård).
Rönnskärin saaristo sijaitsee Merenkurkussa noin 40 kilometriä länteen Vaasasta.
Bergö Hut is on the Bergö vaellusreitti video: 1:04 Kota
Bokningar via Bokning@malax.fi
For the printable map PDF, the latest condition note about the duckboards, and practical access from the Kajane road, Maalahden kunta lists this outing as Kajanen vaellusreitti alongside other municipal trails(1). The Kajane mire trail is about 2.9 km on our map—a short bog and forest walk in Maalahti in Ostrobothnia, starting from the Kajane campsite area beside a large raised bog near the small lakes Lillträsket and Lisansjön. Maalahden kunta describes a marked network that uses duckboards across the bog and reaches out toward Lisansjön, with information boards about local wildlife and plants along the way(1). One signed branch of about 0.8 km leads to Lillträsket, where there is a lean-to for breaks(1). Read the municipal warning carefully before you plan a longer loop: at last update, only the duckboard section toward Lillträsket was reported to be in passable shape, while other segments could be very difficult to walk(1). Yrkesakademin i Österbotten maintains the Kajane lägercenter grounds and explains that the marshes are a Natura area with boardwalks open to the public, information boards on the trails, and routes continuing toward Lillträsket and Lisansjön(2). The campsite itself offers a sauna, overnight cabin, and several grill shelters; fees apply for the cabin and sauna, so check their booking page if you want to add an overnight or sauna stop(1)(2). Retkiseikkailu’s Maalahti roundup names Kajane as a roughly 3 km outing and points readers to the municipal outdoor pages for detail(3).
Storskäret nature trail is about 1.3 km of marked walking on Storskäret island in Maalahti, in Ostrobothnia’s Kvarken archipelago just north of the Rönnskär group. The island is a nature reserve managed by Metsähallitus together with the joint property arrangements of Outer and Upper Malax; Storskärets Intresseförening looks after visitor information, printed trail maps in the guest-harbour box, and firewood supplied for the harbour grill spots. For rules on staying on paths, where fires are allowed, dog leashing seasons, snakes, and ancient monuments, read the hiking trail notes from Storskärets Intresseförening(1). The City of Malax groups mainland routes with Visit Vaasa’s Kvarken audio-guide links when you are planning other walks in the municipality(2). Merenkurkun Lintutieteellinen Yhdistys presents Storskäret as an outer-archipelago bird destination with informative boards, a small bird tower near the east-side fishing cluster, a picnic table, tent sites, and the guest harbour—worth reading for breeding-season behaviour and realistic sea distances(3). Visit Vaasa publishes the World Heritage archipelago audio-guide episodes that include Maalahti material alongside Vaasa-side stops(4). Most visitors arrive by small boat to the association guest harbour, where a storage building hosts an information point, composting toilet, first-aid gear, a defibrillator, and leave-no-trace reminders; Malax Navigation Club maintains a fairway line toward Storskär, summarised on Solrutten with video and chart context(5)(6). On land you move between low rocky heights, pockets of mixed forest, and shoreline meadows. At the south end the broad sandy bay called Södra viken is named as a swimming beach in local destination text(3). Fires are only permitted at the designated grills by the Norrkumlet wind shelter and at the guest harbour area(1). The walk is short and easy underfoot for careful walkers but still an island outing: watch for uneven rock, roots, and wet stone near the shore, and treat sea weather as its own forecast(3)(5).
For route choices, markings, maintenance responsibility, and the downloadable map PDF, Maalahden kunta publishes everything under its hiking trails and nature paths hub(1). The Majors nature trail is a forest path option in Maalahti in Ostrobothnia, in the coastal countryside southwest of the main village. The trail is about 3.2 km, which lines up with the longest of the route lengths the municipality lists for this site. Maalahden kunta describes three signed distance alternatives—about 1.2 km, 2.2 km, and 3.4 km—from the same trailhead(1). The trail is marked with blue ribbon and information boards; on the shortest option, stairs appear in the steepest climbs(1). There is a rest spot with a log table along the way(1). Retkiseikkailu’s Maalahti roundup sums the outing as either a 1.2 km or 3.4 km walk and points readers back to the municipal sports and outdoor pages for detail(2). Maalahden kunta also highlights Visit Vaasa’s Merenkurkun saariston ääniopas as a wider listening guide that includes Malax-area destinations—useful background if you are pairing this walk with other Kvarken coast plans(3). Öjnan village association (Öjnan kyläyhdistys) maintains the nature trail; Maalahden kunta remains the place to confirm the latest conditions(1). There are no linked huts or lean-tos on this route in our stop data, so pack water and snacks and keep the outing self-contained.
Kackurmossen hiking trail is about 5.7 km through boreal peatland and forest in Malax (Maalahti) on the Ostrobothnia coast. For the latest updates on how it links to the wider footpath network, start with the City of Malax outdoor pages, which describe Metsähallitus-maintained Velkmossa trail plus a dedicated path into Kackurmossen itself(1). The EUNIS factsheet summarises why the wider Kackurmossen site matters for birds and habitats across roughly 760 hectares of Natura 2000 ground(2), and Protected Planet lists the same protected footprint in the World Database on Protected Areas(3). Almost straight away you reach Kackurmossen Lintutorni, a birdwatching tower suited to scanning wetlands and forest edges. Later sections follow the long axis of the peatland mosaic that the Natura listing documents: cranes, harriers, owls, grebes, and terns are among the species tied to the site’s conservation objectives, alongside mammals such as otter and Siberian flying squirrel(2). Maalahti sits in the Kvarken archipelago UNESCO setting; the City of Vaasa produces audio guides that also cover Maalahti-area day trips for visitors exploring the coast(4). Pair this walk with those guides if you want spoken route context before you leave Vaasa.
Maalahti is a coastal municipality in Ostrobothnia. Åminne hiking trail is about 1.8 km as one gentle forestry walk near the sea in the Åminne recreation area. Near the far end you reach Grillikota, Dimmornas bro, a grill kota by Dimmornas bro along Åminnevägen—handy for a break or picnic after a short outing. Maalahden kunta describes the wider route network from two road access points, easy going underfoot, and maintenance by Åminne–Tuv allaktivitetsförening rf(1). Luontoon.fi lists the same trail name for national outdoor planning alongside other Maalahti routes(2). Retkiseikkailu notes short and longer distance examples for Åminne in a regional trip index(3). The seafront Åminne area also groups a municipal beach, guest harbour, folk park, boat museum, holiday village, and bird tower a short distance from the path system—useful context if you combine a walk with swimming or a museum visit.
For distances, how the nature trail is split into branches, who maintains it, and a printable PDF map, Maalahden kunta gathers the essentials on its hiking trails and nature paths pages(1). The same route is also listed nationally on Luontoon.fi for browsing alongside other outdoor destinations(2). The Pixnen nature trail is about 4.6 km as one walk, which lines up with the roughly 4.5 km longest option Maalahden kunta describes. The municipality describes four on-site distance choices—about 1.8 km, 3.1 km, 3.4 km, and 4.5 km—so you can match the outing to your time and energy(1). Maintenance is handled locally by Pixne allaktivitetsförening while operational checks should still go through Maalahden kunta(1). Maalahti sits in Ostrobothnia where woodland, lakes, and the sea coast blend; Maalahden kunta also points hikers to Visit Vaasa’s Merenkurkun saariston ääniopas when you want audio stories covering wider Kvarken-area outings that include Malax sites(3). About 3.1 km into the walk you pass near Multiareena 2 Maalahti and Yttermalax hiekkakenttä, both right beside the Pixne facilities where people play and train. If you want toilets, disc golf, or indoor training after the walk, the Pixne sports area pages list a nine-basket course, multi-use hall, outdoor gym, and other services around Idrottsvägen(4).
For downloadable map images, the digital route map, and how Bergön vaellusreitti fits the municipality’s wider trail list, start with the City of Maalahti(1). Retkipaikka’s Luontopolkumies walk-through is worth reading for on-the-ground detail: wooden bird sculptures and nature-themed paintings by local artist Lars Göran Söderholm, the blue- and red-marked loop sections, and practical notes on stones, roots, and pace(2). Askeleitasuomessa adds a short family-oriented summary of the free ferry link and parking(3). Bergön Hiking Trail is about 5.6 km as one continuous line on our map, on Bergö island in Maalahti, Ostrobothnia. The City of Maalahti describes route choices on the island of about 3.5 km or up to about 8 km, with rest places, information boards, artworks, and the Adolf grill kota where you can pause and cook(1). One walk report timed the full figure-eight at about two hours and a quarter and measured it close to 7.4 km(2). Near the end of the line you pass Bergö Hut, a good landmark for a break. The trail crosses conifer forest, short gravel road sections, and duckboards; some stretches are stony or damp, so sturdy footwear helps(2)(3). Maalahti is a bilingual coastal municipality; Bergö is reached by a short cable-ferry crossing from the mainland(3). The sculpture trail is a strong draw for visitors who enjoy art in the forest, not summit views—the terrain stays low with only small relief(2).
The Iron Age Hiking Trail is about 2.2 km in Maalahti, Ostrobothnia. It is a short archaeological walking route through a coastal forest burial landscape with Iron Age stone cairns and cup-marked stones, rich ground vegetation, and an information cottage along the way. Malax Museum Association operates the trail and publishes season dates and brochure links on its Iron Age Trail page(1); the printable Iron Age Trail brochure(2) repeats the same practical details. Brinken Museum(3) describes the wider museum work in Malax and notes that on the Iron Age path you can see on the order of forty grave heaps on a roughly two-kilometre walk with an information cottage—consistent with the scale of this outdoor route. Retkiseikkailu lists the local name Rautakauden polku with length options of about 800 m or 1.8 km, which matches the two marked alternatives in the association’s material(4). Underfoot you can expect narrow forest paths and roots; the setting is quiet and interpretive rather than a mountain hike. The same association also maintains other short heritage trails in Malax, including a separate chalet trail in Molapne, which is not the same route as this Iron Age walk(1).
5 korgar
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Maalahti.
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.
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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?).
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