A map of 148 sports and nature sites in Ikaalinen.
The hut is in free use, the home has a barbecue option.
For opening hours, guided tours, the summer pop-up café, and accessibility at the destination farmstead, start with the Koveron perinnetila pages on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Tampere Region summarises Seitsemisen kansallispuisto as old-growth forest, quiet mires, and ridge scenery, with Koveron perinnetila as the cultural heart of the park(2). Retkipaikka’s Seitsemisen overview is useful for how parking areas, tent sites, and longer loops such as Virkatie and Seitakierros relate to the nature centre and Kovero(3). Meriharakka.net’s account of a summer visit—switching from Runokangas to Kovero and Aarnipolku after talking with staff—gives a sense of how visitors often combine short legs in the same visit(4). The trail is about 7.5 km point-to-point through Seitsemisen kansallispuisto between Seitsemisen luontokeskus and the Kovero heritage farm area in Ikaalinen, Pirkanmaa. It is a day-hike link through forested terrain rather than a loop: you can walk it in either direction or use it as part of longer marked routes that pass the same hubs. Near the nature-centre end, Seitsemisen luontokeskus takkakatos offers a sheltered fireplace stop, and Ahvenlammi laituri sits close to the line for anyone combining the walk with a short time by the water. About 0.8 km from the nature-centre end of the route, Pakkulakangas pysäköintialue is a natural access point if you join the line from the road network there. Mid-route, around 5.4 km, Kirkkaanlamminkangas pysäköintialue marks the junction area where the short Yhdyspolku Kirkkaanlamminkangas-Luontokeskus-Kovero reitille ties Kirkaslampi parking clusters into the main link. The Kirkaslampi keittokatos and Kirkaslampi pysäköintialue / Kirkaslampi pysäköintialue 2 form a compact service cluster with cooking shelter and parking before the final approach to Koverolampi. In the last kilometre, Koverolampi käymälä, Koverolampi tulentekopaikka, Koverolampi telttailualue, and Koverolampi laituri sit together by the lake—tent camping, a campfire spot, and a small dock for a break before Kovero pysäköintilaue and Kovero porakaivo at the farm end. The same start at Seitsemisen luontokeskus connects to other marked hikes including Runokangas and Harjupolku Ylöjärvi, and Paroonin taival meets the line toward Parkano. From the Kovero end you can continue on Torpparintaival or tie into long-distance links such as Uittajanpolku without retracing this entire segment. Terrain is typical national-park forest walking: roots and natural tread under mixed woodland, with facilities spaced for day trips rather than remote wilderness travel. Ikaalinen lies in Pirkanmaa; the park straddles Ikaalinen and Ylöjärvi, with the nature centre often referenced from Länsi-Aure and Kovero from Seitsemisentie 948.
This connector is about 2 km one way through Seitseminen National Park from Kirkkaanlamminkangas pysäköintialue to the Haukilampi lakeshore in Ikaalinen, Pirkanmaa. For the latest official route list, maps, services, and visitor rules in the park, see the Seitseminen National Park section on Luontoon.fi(1). Retkipaikka summarizes practical visitor basics such as driving distances from Tampere, main car parks that have winter maintenance, and the location of tent camping areas that include Haukilampi among the park’s serviced campsites(2). From Kirkkaanlamminkangas pysäköintialue the marked path passes Kirkaslampi pysäköintialue after about 0.6 km. Kirkaslampi keittokatos sits on the wider trail network beside those Kirkaslampi parking pockets and works well as a windbreak lunch stop before you push on to the lake at the far end. At Haukilampi laituri you reach Haukilampi tulentekopaikka and open lake views; dry toilets are available at the lakeshore for day visitors. Read more on our pages for Haukilampi laituri and Haukilampi tulentekopaikka when you want fireplace details or map context. The same Haukilampi shore point sits on longer foot routes such as Torpparintaival and Uittajanpolku, so this yhdyspolku works as a short linear preview, as an access spur from the Kirkkaanlamminkangas parking hub, or as a link into those circuits. Luontopolkumies Mika Markkanen writes on Retkipaikka about forested ridges, mire strings with duckboards, and the gently busy morning atmosphere at Haukilampi when loop hikers meet campers at the fireplace(3). Metsähallitus lists Torpparintaival as a 6.3 km ring from Kovero heritage farm with Haukilampi as a rest stop(4). At the Kirkkaanlamminkangas trailhead end, the long-distance cycling route Järvienreitit- Aure shares the parking spur with hikers stepping onto the path. Yhdyspolku Kirkkaanlamminkangas-Luontokeskus-Kovero reitille, Kirkkaanlamminneva yhdyspolku, and Luontokeskus-Koveron perinnetila continue the network toward Seitsemisen luontokeskus and Kovero when you plan a joined-up day. Seitsemisen luontokeskus is the main visitor hub for exhibits, food service, and route tips on the Ylöjärvi side of the park.
The trail is about 17 km as a day loop through the southern part of Seitsemisen National Park around Ikaalinen, Pirkanmaa. Ikaalinen hosts the Kovero end of the ring; Pirkanmaa spreads across western inland Finland in travel terms. Metsähallitus keeps the national-park rules, downloadable maps, and this route’s own page on Luontoon.fi(1). UutisOiva spoke with Metsähallitus specialist Johanna Väkeväinen about how the loop gathers Kovero heritage farm, Multiharju old-growth forest, and the Soljanen mires, follows riverbanks tied to historic log floating on Seitsemisjoki and Liesijoki, and replaces the former Seitakierros and Virkatie lines that crossed private land whose agreements had ended(2). Askeleitasuomessa adds hiker pacing from the same trailheads, notes on boardwalk wear after rain, and how sparse paint dots and junction signs still let many walkers finish without juggling a separate map(3). From Kovero pysäköintilaue the ring overlaps the early kilometres of Torpparintaival via farm lanes toward Koverolampi telttailualue, Koverolampi tulentekopaikka, and Koverolampi laituri—useful if you want a swim, a tent pitch, and cooking space within the first few hundred metres. About 1.3 km into the loop, Haukilampi tulentekopaikka, Haukilampi laituri, and Haukilampi käymälä cluster as the first long-shore break after gentle moraine slopes. Honkaniemi tulentekopaikka and Honkaniemi käymälä follow near the three-kilometre mark on forested banks before the trail reaches the wide Kirkas-Soljanen and Saari-Soljanen service area. Between roughly eight and nine kilometres you pass Kirkas-Soljasen pysäköintialue, Kirkas-Soljanen pysäköintialue, Kirkas-Soljanen telttailualue, Kirkas-Soljanen varauskeittokatos, Kirkas-Soljanen tulentekopaikka, Kirkas-Soljanen porakaivo, Saari-Soljanen pysäköintialue, Saari-Soljanen, parkkipaikka 2, Saari-Soljanen keittokatos, and Saari-Soljanen tulentekopaikka—the densest shelter and parking hub on the route and the natural place to add the short Saari-Soljanen ring or Seitsemisen polkupyöräreitti tangents if you read park junction posts carefully. From there the line works north-west past mire boardwalks and forest roads, crosses Liesijoki where Askeleitasuomessa notes a bridge, and reaches Jokiristi tulentekopaikka, Jokiristi telttailualue, and Jokiristi kuivakäymälä near twelve kilometres as a long lunch or overnight tent option with a cleared fire ring. The closing sector passes Multiharju pysäköintialue for anyone shuttling from Jaulintie, then climbs through Multiharju old-growth terrain that UutisOiva highlights for the steepest contrast on an otherwise gentle park elevation profile. Kortesalo leirikoulutila vuokratupa, Kortesalo tulentekopaikka, and Kortesalo kaivo finish the arc before you drop back toward Kovero facilities, where Luontokeskus-Koveron perinnetila continues toward Seitsemisen luontokeskus exhibits if you want a visitor-centre coffee after the hike. Long-distance hikers can also think about Pirkan Taival for onward links beyond the national park, and short variants such as Aarnipolku or Kortesalo polku still peel off near Multiharju when time is tight. Carry a map at complex junctions because several stacked routes—including Yhdyspolku Haukilampi–Kirkkaanlamminkangas, Kirkas-Soljanen yhdyspolut, and segments shared with Järvienreitit- Aure—use overlapping signage(3). Check Luontoon.fi before travel for fire bans, bird nesting limits around Soljastensuo and Iso Seitsemisjärvi, and any reroutes after storms(1)(2).
Aarnipolku is about 1.8 km through Multiharju’s old-growth forest heart in Seitseminen National Park. The walk sits on the Ikaalinen side of Pirkanmaa and is meant to start and finish at Multiharju parking. For route listings, the restricted Multiharju zone, and current national park rules, use the Seitseminen hiking section on Luontoon.fi(1). Retkipaikka’s Seitseminen guide spells out the same parking link and stresses staying on the path because Multiharju is a restriction area(3). Terrain is easy walking on a wide, well-kept forest tread with short ups and downs on the ridge; some stretches use duckboards where the ground is wetter(4). The forest is famous for ancient pines with thick bark plates and weathered snags among younger spruce and aspen. Meriharakka’s write-up from Multiharju suggests noting a landmark or saving the trailhead on a phone, because sections can look alike in monotonous pine shade(2). About 1.25 km along you pass the Kortesalo cluster: Kortesalo kaivo, Kortesalo leirikoulutila vuokratupa, and Kortesalo tulentekopaikka—a useful break if you want water, a rental hut base, or a legal fire ring before returning toward Multiharju pysäköintialue at the end of the line. The same junction links you into the wider marked network: Kortesalo Trail (0.5 km), Torpparintaival (6.2 km), the long Uittajanpolku, Multiharju–Hirviharju trail (3 km), and Seitsemisen polkupyöräreitti for cyclists in the park(4). Haukilampi and Koverolampi camping pockets on those longer trails are practical if you are stitching a multiday loop together. Dogs are allowed under Finnish national park practice—keep them on a leash and clean up off the trail tread. Carry out all litter; recycling bins are sparse across the park(3).
Tulusmäki is a short, about 1.6 kilometre point-to-point hiking segment in Seitseminen National Park on the Ikaalinen side of Pirkanmaa. It is not a loop: it works best as a forest link along the same corridor where the longer Multiharju–Hirviharju trail and the Seitsemisen polkupyöräreitti meet, so you can combine it with those lines or treat it as a brief walk on pine–spruce ridge and mire-edge terrain typical of the Multiharju area. Ikaalinen lies within easy reach of the park by road; Pirkanmaa offers many other outdoor options if you are planning a longer trip. Metsähallitus manages Seitseminen. For route descriptions, rules, and contacts for the wider Multiharju–Hirviharju hiking line that continues from the same part of the network, the Multiharju–Hirviharju trail page on Luontoon.fi is the right place to start(1). Retkipaikka’s Seitseminen article lists practical access notes, including parking at Multiharju and other car parks around the park(2). Visit Finland summarises the national park for visitors: ancient forests, quiet mires, esker scenery, and services such as the nature centre and rental huts across the protected area(3). Multiharju’s old-growth forest block has been conserved since 1910; Euroopan aarniometsiä describes exceptionally old pines and the ridge-and-mire setting you walk through on nearby marked routes(4). If you continue onto the Multiharju–Hirviharju trail from this junction area, you can reach facilities such as Kortesalo leirikoulutila vuokratupa, Kortesalo tulentekopaikka, and Kortesalo kaivo, and use Multiharju pysäköintialue when approaching from the Multiharju parking area. The Seitsemisen polkupyöräreitti shares part of the same corridor for cyclists exploring the park on marked bike trails.
For the Kyröskoski end of the corridor and how the trail sits in Hämeenkyrö’s north, start with Visit Hämeenkyrö(1). The Lauhanvuori–Hämeenkangas UNESCO Global Geopark describes the wider Pirkan ura as a marked, shared-use corridor on Hämeenkangas: in winter it is heavily used for skiing, and in the snow-free season it is used for hiking, trail running, and mountain biking, with Pirkan ura and MTB waymarking and route signs—marking style can vary by maintainer, so carrying a GPX track is still useful on long outings(2). The same source notes that Hämeenkangas is a Finnish Defence Forces training area, so exercise groups may be present; check current restrictions with Porin prikaati if you need certainty(2). Ikaalinen lies in Pirkanmaa; this page is about the Ikaalinen-maintained segment of Pirkan ura. The trail is about 17.4 km as one line on our map. It is a point-to-point day hike, not a loop, linking the network toward Hämeenkyrö/Kyröskoski with the Pirkanura summer hiking route and Jämi-area trails at the far end. At the Hämeenkyrö end it meets Pirkan taival (Hämeenkyrö) and the Pirkan ura ski trail that runs toward the municipal boundary; along the way it shares ground with lit ski and fitness trails around Vatula. About 6.9 km from the start you reach Vatulan kota, a lean-to shelter on the ridge, and almost immediately Vatulan frisbeegolfrata beside the same outdoor hub. Visit Ikaalinen describes Vatulanharju as part of a long ridge chain from Lintuharju in Hämeenkyrö through Ulvaanharju to steep-sided Vatulanharju, with national nature values, a nature trail with quiz boards, winter ski infrastructure, and a café at the ski centre in season(3). Retkipaikka’s article on Vatulanharju and Ulvaanharju adds historical context for Kyrönkankaan kesätie along the ridge and describes clear Pirkan ura marking along the trail where the author walked(4). If you continue past this segment onto Pirkanura Kesäretkeilyreitti, you enter the long-distance Pirkanura summer hiking network toward Jämi and beyond, with many laavut and services on that route—plan separately for distance and resupply.
Pirkan Taival is a long-distance hiking trail network in northern Pirkanmaa. This page follows about 69.8 km of that network through Ikaalinen as one continuous hiking route. The same Ikaalinen section is listed on Luontoon.fi for nationwide trip planning(1). Six municipalities are preparing a coordinated outdoor route plan for the wider Pirkan Taival corridor so investment and maintenance can follow a shared alignment; project news and materials are published by Ekokumppanit(2). The City of Ikaalinen is part of that work and announces local consultation steps on its own site(3). Maastomarko’s Pirkan Taival III trip report from summer 2023 adds practical notes on markings, forest roads, and the Seitsemisen–Tevaniemi link in the same landscape(4). Ikaalinen lies in Pirkanmaa. For day-to-day planning on this segment, lean on Luontoon.fi(1) together with the municipal project hub(2)(3). Along the first third of this segment, about 7 km from the start, you reach Vähä Ojajärven nuotiopaikka on the Vähä Ojajärvi shore. Around 17 km, the route passes Luhalahden kuntosali and Luhalahden uimapaikka near Lake Kirkkojärvi, and Luhalahden koulun jääkiekkokaukalo—useful landmarks if you are joining the trail from village roads. In the same kilometre band, winter ski tracks such as Luhalahden jäälatu and Luhalahden koulun latu meet the route; in summer the character is forest path and local road links. From the high thirties onward, Kalliolammen nuotiopaikka and Latoveden laavu offer long break options beside forest ponds and small lakes. The same Maastomarko account describes Latoveden laavu as a familiar lunch stop on the way toward Tevaniemi, with a longer forest-road stretch afterward and a crossing of the Ostrobothnia railway where the marked path uses an overpass on a longer loop(4). Still farther, Väinänvuorenlaavu and Vahonkosken laavu sit a few kilometres apart on lake shores—natural targets if you split the hike across several days. The wider Pirkan Taival network connects to other outdoor corridors: where this route meets longer cycling routes or parallel hiking pieces, you can continue on Järvienreitit- Aure, step onto the shorter Pirkan taival Haveri- Väinänvuori day section, or link toward Uittajanpolku and Seitsemisen polkupyöräreitti through the Tevaniemi–Seitsemisen area. Multiharju-Hirviharju is another short hiking connector in the same landscape mosaic.
Kirkkaanlamminneva yhdyspolku is about 0.5 km one way in Seitsemisen kansallispuisto. The trail lies in Ikaalinen in Pirkanmaa and forms a short marked link across the Kirkkaanlamminneva mire section toward Kirkaslampi, where Kirkaslampi pysäköintialue, Kirkaslampi pysäköintialue 2, and Kirkaslampi keittokatos sit at the lake end of the line. For rules, seasonal restrictions elsewhere in the park, and the wider trail network, Metsähallitus publishes the destination on Luontoon.fi(1). The Kirkkaanlamminneva section follows the forested esker that cuts across the raised bog; Kirkaslampi lies west of that ridge in the Koveronneva wetland mosaic. The Yhdyspolku Kirkkaanlamminkangas-Luontokeskus-Kovero reitille(2) listing on Luontoon.fi covers the neighbouring connector that shares Kirkaslampi keittokatos and the same parking areas. Retkipaikka’s Seitsemisen overview notes old-growth forest, quiet mires, and ridge scenery as the park’s signature character, and reminds visitors that waste must be carried out from the backcountry because recycling points are not provided in the terrain(3). Reissaustajaruokaa walked a Kirkaslampi loop from Kovero and Kirkkaanlamminkangas, crossing the road to the marked path toward Kirkaslampi and using the cook shelter and jetty at the lake—practical confirmation of how the Kirkaslampi stops connect to the wider route mesh(4). This connector ties into longer hiking routes that use the same lakeshore facilities: Luontokeskus-Koveron perinnetila passes Kirkaslampi keittokatos and parking on its way between Seitsemisen luontokeskus and Kovero, Yhdyspolku Kirkkaanlamminkangas-Luontokeskus-Kovero reitille is the short link from Kirkkaanlamminkangas toward those routes, and Yhdyspolku Haukilampi- Kirkkaanlamminkangas links Haukilampi to Kirkkaanlamminkangas(2). Järvienreitit–Aure runs through the same area for cyclists. Together, those routes let you combine a few minutes on Kirkkaanlamminneva with half-day or full-day loops around Torpparintaival, Kovero, and the nature centre.
Plan the Aure loop from the route hub on Järvienreitit.fi, which publishes downloadable GPX, an interactive map collection, and the recommended two-day pacing for this quiet-lake corridor(1). Visit Tampere sums up the same ride for visitors starting from Tampere or connecting by train(2). Metsähallitus explains where cycling is allowed in Seitsemisen kansallispuisto and which trails remain hiking-only(3), so read that page before you enter the park on a bike. The trail is about 128.7 km as one closed loop. Järvienreitit.fi quotes roughly 128 km with about 17.3 percent unpaved surface, about 3.7 percent on cycle paths, and roughly 2150 m of ascent along the marketed profile(1)—use our geometry number for GPS planning and treat their brochure-style rounding as the same loop. Pirkanmaa ties together Ikaalinen, Kihniö, and Parkano here, and the line is built for riders who want forest roads, lake beaches, and low traffic rather than busy highways. Near the northern arc around Ikaalinen, the route passes Metsämuseon laavu ja nuotiopaikka and Riuttasjärvi Beach & Outdoor Grill, where a short walking connection meets Käpykintukka through shared lakeshore parking. Linnankylän uimapaikka offers a swimming stop before the trace turns toward the Aure village countryside between fields and compacted sand roads. Inside Seitsemisen, Seitsemisen luontokeskus is the natural service hub with exhibitions and a restaurant, while Kirkaslampi keittokatos and the Kirkaslampi parking cluster lead out toward Kovero pysäköintilaue—many riders stage a car here for a two-day ride as described in the travel press on the same site(4). Koverolampi telttailualue and nearby cooking shelters back onto the Kovero heritage farm setting in the national park. Further west, Luhalahden uimapaikka and the village shore at Luhalahti balance the long west-side lakes, and Tevaniemen uimapaikka marks another swim-friendly bay before you climb back through Yliskylän uimapaikka toward Parkano. Along Viinikanjoki through Parkano, Haapaslammen laavu and Viinikankosken laavu bracket picnic and fishing angles on the same waterway that Parkanon melontareitti follows for canoeists—handy context if your group mixes bikes and boats. Parkano’s centre rewards slow riding: outdoor tables beside the river, local shops, and the town’s well-known ITE sculptures are called out in both the regional and network pages(1)(2). Hanna Eronen describes two summer days on the Aure ring with stops at village cafés, Kihniö’s blanket bog museum road, and Pyhäniemi-style lake accommodation before returning via Poltinkoski and Luhalahdentie, which matches how quiet the back roads feel in practice(4). If you are not bringing your own bike, Ikaalinen Spa & Resort hires Jopo-style city bikes and e-fatbikes near the spa shore in Ikaalinen, including day rates suited to tacking an Aure section onto a resort stay(5).
This is the signed mountain-bike corridor through Seitsemäinen National Park on the Ikaalinen–Ylöjärvi boundary in Pirkanmaa. On our map it runs about 17.9 km as one continuous line through lake, mire, and old-growth pockets that the park is known for. For route markings, closures, and national-park rules, start from the Seitsemäinen bike route page on Luontoon.fi(1) and the wider Seitsemäinen National Park hub on the same site(2). Regional coverage summarising Metsähallitus interviews notes that cyclists were given a dedicated signed line of roughly 16 km that uses park roads in places and shares tread with the riding route and the Uittajanpolku hiking ring in sections, so you should expect walkers and equestrian users as well as other riders(3). You may cycle on all roads that cross the park area(3). Along the line, the Kirkas-Soljanen and Saari-Soljanen service cluster—roughly 3 km from the trace on our page—layers a tent camping zone, reservable cooking shelter, campfire sites, and several small car parks within a short distance of the water, which makes it a natural first break if you began from the north-eastern part of the loop. Multiharju parking sits farther along the southern arc. Around 11–12 km you reach the Honkaniemi and Pitkäjärvi shore band, where a rental cabin, sauna, jetty, well, and parking sit close together for a longer stop or swim on calm days. Nearing the north-western segment, Liesijärvi adds a lean-to, more campfire spots, and tent pitches; this end also lines up with the Pirkan Taival long-distance hiking corridor if you want to plan linked trips. Independent trip writing on Kirkas-Soljanen reminds readers that mountain biking remains restricted to authorised corridors in the park and that staying on the marked bike line is what keeps riding compatible with conservation rules(4). The same notes highlight how Pirkan Taival’s wider corridor offers additional forest riding in the region when you want to expand beyond the national-park circuit(4).
This mountain bike line is about 23.4 km end to end as a point-to-point ride from the Ikaalinen Spa shore on Lake Kyrösjärvi to the Jämi sports and holiday area. Visit Ikaalinen pulls together the bigger Pirkan Taival picture, winter track and map links, and how the Hämeenkangas harju landscapes sit in northern Pirkanmaa—useful background for the countryside and forest legs you ride before the Jämi hub(1). The Jämi.fi cycling pages pitch easy pine-trail riding around the resort, fatbike and mountain bike hire, and how Geobike Hämeenkangas and the Pirkan ura corridor fit the same sand-and-needle forest for snow-free-season riding(2). From Ikaalinen Spa the line soon threads past Rivéran uimaranta and Heinistön uimapaikka, then crosses the Kilvakkalan koulun Ässäkenttä and Kilvakkalan koulun kenttä block—handy landmarks in a compact shore-and-school belt. The middle is where small roads and open farmland views dominate; a long-standing route write-up on Mtbfin still matches what riders feel on the ground: almost all of the distance is quiet gravel and village roads, with roughly one kilometre on a narrow forest tractor lane that can stay soft after heavy rain(3). Carry a map or GPX in any case—the blog author notes junctions where several marked alternatives meet near Jämi. Approaching Hämeenkangas toward Jämi you pick up more needle-forest shelter belts and harju scenery. Koivistonharjun laavu and Pirkan laavu offer sheltered stops before the Niiniharju laavu, Niiniharju laavun tulipaikka, and Niiniharju Niinikota cluster around Jämin laskettelurinne; Niiniharjun esteetön käymälä sits with that group. The line aligns with Pirkanura Kesäretkeilyreitti for part of the arrival zone, and Koivistonkierros loops the same Niiniharju facilities if you want a short extra lap. Nearer Jämikeskus and Jämi Areena, Soininharjun näkötorni, Soininharjun laavu, Seimilaavu, Caravankota, Jämi-Jukolan laavu, Lehtolaavu, and Pikkuvati P-paikka frame the sports-centre edge—Jämin seikkailupuisto, Jämin maauimala, and the frisbeepuisto read as the built-up finish. Polkutiimi promotes the Jämi MTB marathon cup round in August, centring the race arena at Jämi Areena and describing a longer Hämeenkangas course than this everyday spa-to-Jämi connector(4). Metsähallitus summarises access rules, conservation pockets, and Finnish Defence Forces training restrictions across Hämeenkangas—worth reading before you detour onto informal paths(5).
Omat puut mukaan.
Tasainen maasto.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Kyläyhdistys Vatulan Nykäyksen vuonna 2019 Vatulanharjulle toteuttama frisbeegolfrata. Rata pelattavissa joko 6- tai 9-väyläisenä. Ota pelatessasi huomioon muut alueella liikkuvat, kuten kuntoilijat ja marjastajat. Ratakartta ja tuloskortti: https://frisbeegolfradat.fi/rata/vatulan-frisbeegolfrata/
Ampumaradat 25-200m
Lintutornilla nuotiopaikka. Omat puut mukaan.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Ikaalinen.
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