A map of 490 sports and nature sites in Pori.
The electric sauna has glass walls over looking the water. The word sauna is a traditional Finnish sauna.
Own firewood to be imported
Iso-Enskeri is an uninhabited forest island in Bothnian Sea National Park, and Metsähallitus publishes park rules, maps, and service listings for the area on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Pori outlines charter boat access from Reposaari, what to bring for a half-day ashore, and how narrow marked paths visit beach meadows, lichen-rich spruce forest, and anthills before returning toward the landing(2). Kipparilehti’s harbour notes add that the northern end of the island is under stricter protection, that glacial boulder clearings typical of the outer archipelago sit along the footpaths, and that the marked routes sample only part of the island—worth reading before you plan your own berth or rental dinghy approach(3). The trail is about 1.6 km as a loop through the wooded northern side of the island. Pori hosts the municipal coastline and Satakunta supplies the regional context. Near the excursion harbour you pass Iso-Enskeri keittokatos and Iso-Enskeri tulentekopaikka for meals, a hand pump at Iso-Enskeri kaivo, Iso-Enskeri laituri for small boats, and a dry toilet beside Iso-Enskeri käymälä—clustered a short walk from where most visitors step ashore. The shorter Iso-Enskeri luontopolku starts from the same services pocket and explores the southern forest; many people stroll both loops in one visit. Expect roots, gravel, and occasional bedrock underfoot, light traffic most days, and partial shade from dense spruce and pine. Seabirds use the surrounding waters heavily; pack a wind shell even when the mainland feels warm.
Polsanluoto trail is about 0.9 km as one continuous loop on Polsanluoto, a small natural island in the Kokemäenjoki estuary next to Hanhipuisto in Pori. The walk is an easy, family-friendly nature path mixing duckboards and boardwalks through leafy riverside woodland a stone’s throw from the city centre, within Pori National Urban Park. Visit Pori describes installation of a footbridge on the upper arm of the side channel and a hand-operated capstan ferry on the lower arm after a full refurbishment of the 1990s trail, and notes a campfire spot by the river where you bring your own firewood(1). For seasonal ferry installation, removal to winter storage (typically October–November), capacity (roughly five people per trip), and maintenance timing, City of Pori’s news updates are the clearest operational source(2). Starting from the Hanhiluoto side near Hanhipuisto, you cross to Polsanluoto on a wooden bridge; the path threads between gnarled trees and wide duckboards. About halfway around, Polsanluodon nuotiopaikka sits close to the water—ideal for a snack break if you carry firewood and tidy up after yourself(1)(2). When the cable ferry is in place for the summer season, you can complete the island circuit across the narrow channel toward Kirjurinluoto; City of Pori states the ferry sits on the downstream side of the channel at Hanhiluoto(2). If the ferry is not yet rigged or has been lifted for winter, simply return the way you came—the island is compact either way. On the wider Kirjurinluoto park island, Kirjurinluodon nuotiopaikka, Kirjurinluodon frisbeegolfpuisto and Kirjurinluodon nurmikenttä lie a short stroll from the trail for families who want playgrounds, sport fields or another campfire corner after the loop. Closer to the winter-sports arena, Areenan nuotiopaikka anchors a cluster of routes people often combine with this walk, including Kirjurinluodon lenkki 1,3 km, Kirjurinluodon kuntorata 3,3 km and Hevosluodon reitti. In 2017 Polsanluoto was named Pori’s first “Mielipuisto”, a wellbeing-themed park designation promoted with the Satakunta Association for Mental Health to highlight restorative short walks in nature(1). Retkipaikka’s walk report on Polsanluoto in spring underlines how quickly traffic noise fades once you step onto the duckboard lane, calls spring birdsong one of the main rewards, and notes benches along the path and practical access for strollers on the wider boardwalk sections while still stressing that the route is not fully barrier-free(3). Dedicated YouTube searches did not surface a short on-trail video that clearly names this exact path; a verified clip could be added later if one appears.
Visit Pori gathers route descriptions and an up-to-date hiking map for Yyteri’s trail network(1). The trail is about 3.6 km one way in Pori, on the edge of Selkämeren kansallispuisto mudflats and coastal woods. It ties together three viewing spots already on our map: Leveäkarin lintutorni within the first hundred metres from the route start, Huhtalan luontotorni roughly three kilometres along, and Langoura esteetön luontolava at the Huhtalanraitti end. That makes a compact bird-watching line between the Rantahaantie parking and signposting used for Leveäkari and the Huhtalanraitti 206 parking area by Langoura, where you can also pick up Lietteiden reitti toward Munakari and the open sands. Metsähallitus presents the longer Lietteiden reitti as a separate marked mudflats trail on Luontoon.fi(2); your hike overlaps that world-class wader habitat and boardwalk landscape, only as a shorter cross-link between towers rather than the full janareitti to the beach. About 0.1 km from the start you are at Leveäkarin lintutorni, a woodland-edge tower with open views over lagoon-like shallows and migrating waterfowl—Satakunnan Lintutieteellinen yhdistys still notes why local birders rate the tower highly(5). Farther along, Huhtalan luontotorni lets you look across Preiviikinlahti shallows; the path uses long stretches of duckboards typical of Yyteri’s lietteet. Near the finish, Langoura esteetön luontolava is a low, wheelchair-accessible viewing platform with interpretation panels; Yyteri’s accessibility pages describe the deck and its barrier-free dry toilet(3). The separate 0.1 km Esteetön Langouran reitti on our map is the fully accessible spur from Huhtalanraitti parking—combine it when you want an effortless visit without crossing the full connector. Mirka Lahdekorpi’s Askeleitasuomessa article from Huhtalanraitti explains how families sometimes walk part of Lietteiden reitti toward Sannannokka, then turn back, or visits only Langoura and Huhtala—handy for judging time on duckboards and for noting that Huhtala boardwalks can feel rough after winter(4). Pori lies on the west coast of Finland. Satakunta offers long seaboard flats where shorebirds concentrate in migration. When you want more distance after Langoura, continue on Lietteiden reitti past Huhtalan luontotorni toward Isosanta, Sannannokan luontotorni, and Yyterin lietteiden luontolava, or return to Leveäkari via Reitti Leväkarin luontotornille.
The trail is about 0.6 km as a short link from the Preiviikinlahti parking edge to Ooviikin luontolava, a shore-level nature observation platform over Ooviiki bay in Pori. Visit Pori gathers the region’s boardwalk circuits, bird towers, and longer coastal outings in one place for trip planning(1). The Pori Ornithological Society documents how to reach this exact stop by car and what you might see on the water—swans and other waterfowl gathering to moult, busy migration periods, and waders on the flats when the tide is low(2). Bring binoculars if you can; the wider Preiviikinlahti shore system is one of Finland’s best-known bird areas, and Ooviiki is a calm, sheltered corner of that mosaic. From the first metre you are heading for Ooviikin luontolava. Retkeilyä Satakunnassa ja muualla Suomessa describes an easy, well-kept path: a brief stretch along the forest road, then left where a luontolava sign points toward the boardwalks(3). Retkiseikkailu notes traditional larch duckboards on the Ooviiki approach and contrasts them with plastic sections used elsewhere in the network—helpful if you are curious why the footing feels different here than on neighbouring towers(4). The same parking area also begins the longer leg circuiting Preiviikinlahti and a roughly 700–750 m connection toward Kalaranta for anyone who wants to extend the outing after the platform(2)(3)(4). See more on our page for Ooviikin luontolava when you need stop-specific detail. Pori sits on the Satakunta coast, and Preiviikinlahti links shallow bays, grazed meadows, and reedbeds that managers keep open for nesting and migratory birds. That context explains why even this short walk targets birders first: you are stepping into a Natura-backed shorescape where quiet behaviour pays off for you and for wildlife.
Mäntyniemi Trail is about 0.9 km as a short loop on the Yyteri mudflats in Pori, Satakunta, threading boardwalks through reed-fringed shallows beside Preiviikinlahti. Visit Pori’s Yyteri pages describe how the wider Yyteri trail network, bird towers, and mudflat routes connect for a full day outdoors, with more than thirty kilometres of signed paths to combine(1). Outdoors Satakunta’s Lietteiden reitti guide places this corner inside the same coastal system: red colour codes on wooden posts, long duckboard legs, gravel approaches, and ties into Natura shores and the edge of Selkämeri National Park on the full 8 km out-and-back day route(2). Yyterin lietteiden luontolava is right beside the early part of the loop—a roofed lean-to style stop if you want shelter before you move onto the open boardwalks. Roughly 0.6 km into the circuit, Sannannokan luontotorni, Hathurun luontolava, and Isosanta 1 cluster as the main birdwatch and viewpoint pocket over the lietteet. From there the loop closes back through pine-edged marsh fringe rather than pushing all the way south toward Munakari, so you can treat this as a focused mudflat sampler when time is tight. The route meets Lietteiden reitti at a junction where the duckboards widen; that longer 4 km per direction line continues toward Huhtalan luontotorni, Langoura, and the sand dunes. Retkeilyä Satakunnassa writes warmly about the same junction, calling it the Mäntyniemi loop crossover, and mentions a stroller-friendly wide boardwalk segment when you join the main mudflats line from this side—still judge surfaces yourself after rain or snowmelt(3). City of Pori publishes an updated Yyteri hiking trail PDF map that shows how the short loops and the Lietteiden spine fit together for planning(4).
Kettukallio Trail is a short hiking route of about 2 km in Pori, in the Satakunta region, winding through forest and rocky ground toward the Kettukallio rock outcrop. For who maintains outdoor routes in the municipality and how structures are cared for, see the City of Pori’s hiking trail maintenance pages(1). Retkipaikka describes the Kettukallio site as G2–protected since 1984, with open views over forest and fields, small rock hollows, and paths ranging from easy walking to steeper rocky lines(2). Askeleita Suomessa gives practical notes on parking near Rottapäkintie and combining the walk with Luolakallio and lakes nearby(3). Walkers often combine a visit here with the nearby Luolakallio rocks and, with extra time, lakeside detours such as Rottajärvi(3). One scenic approach follows the old railway embankment from the direction of Toejoenrantakatu, crossing fields and woods before reaching Rottapäkintie(2). By car, many use the informal parking strip near Rottapäkintie before a gated private road; space is tight, so arrive prepared to park carefully and respect nearby homes(3).
Herrainpäivät nature trail is a short loop of about 1.1 km around Herrainpäivät cape on the Yyteri peninsula in Pori, on the Satakunta coast. The path runs through shoreline forest on land protected under nature conservation law; Visit Pori’s Herrainpäivät page describes roots, stones, and occasional windthrows on the forest path, with optional short detours to the rocky shore for sea views over Preiviikinlahti and the outer archipelago(1). Marking is a spruce symbol inside a green circle on an orange background at the trailhead post, and the loop can be walked in either direction(1). The same trailhead area links to a very short approach path called Polku Herrainpäiville on our map, which joins this loop at the start. In dry conditions the surface is also described as suitable for cycling; there is no winter maintenance (1). Fires are not allowed in the nature reserve, there is a rest spot with benches, and visitors are asked to respect bird nesting peace(1). Porin kaupunki and Metsähallitus announced a major renewal funded with additional state budget: aims include curbing erosion on the trail, a fully accessible northern section and a more demanding accessible southern section, two new viewpoints, a rest place with a cooking shelter inspired by coastal fishing-hut heritage, nature interpretation panels, an accessible toilet building, and better parking, with phased completion targeted during 2026 after procurement and permits (2). For a concise on-the-ground take, Askeleitasuomessa notes clear signage near Kesätie, easy access to shoreline boulders, a child-friendly story about the common merganser along the path, and reminds that any ad-hoc campfire spot would be illegal in the reserve; they also point birders toward nearby Levon bird tower on Karhuluodontie, which is outside this loop but en route toward Herrainpäivät by car (3).
For the full Enäjärvi walking circuit, orange marking, seasonal access, structures around the lake, and reserve behaviour, Visit Pori’s Enäjärvirundan page is the clearest single overview(1). Askeleita Suomessa describes family-friendly options from the Enäjärventie parking area, including very short visits focused on the observation spots versus hiking the whole loop(2). Porin Lintutieteellinen Yhdistys gives birdwatcher-oriented driving and walking directions to the east-shore observation deck and to Enäjärven lintutorni, with context on the lake’s international bird-water status(3). Endorfiinejä’s notes on the wider Haikarapolku / lake-side paths flag worn duckboards and some roadside noise—useful if you extend from this tiny segment onto Enäjärven kierros(4). Nature tower path is a very short loop in Meri-Pori at the Enäjärvi trailhead: the trail is about 0.1 km and centres on Enäjärven luontolava beside Lake Enäjärvi, roughly ten kilometres from central Pori along Mäntyluototie(1). It works best as a minimal outing or as the first steps before joining Polku luontolavalle or the approximately four-kilometre Enäjärven kierros past Enäjärven lintutorni, boardwalks, and short road edges described for Enäjärvirundan(1)(2). Visit Pori places an accessible observation deck about a hundred metres from the main car park(1), which matches how this route is recorded as a brief circuit at the deck cluster. From Enäjärven luontolava you look over reeds and open water that attract nesting and migrating waterfowl; Visit Pori highlights storks among species to watch on calm days(1). The wider orange-marked circuit is not maintained in winter and is not intended for cycling(1); in ski season groomed options in the same foreshore area include Kyläsaaren ladut(1). Pori lies in Satakunta. For the latest on conditions and local guidance, start with Visit Pori(1).
Luontoon.fi publishes a dedicated page for this Porin metsä fatbike circuit at roughly seven kilometres(1). The City of Pori curates maps, notices, and maintenance for the wider Porin metsä network on its outdoor pages(2). Visit Pori highlights parking and the compact city-forest setting for visitors(3). The loop is about 7.2 km on our GPS line; the 7,5 km name matches local signage and materials, while Luontoon and rider guides round to about seven kilometres(1)(5). Finnish MTB listings describe the classic lap as blue-grade overall—mostly straightforward forest trail—with rootier technical moments toward the eastern woods by the airport and soft peat crossings that crews stabilised with light gravel in early 2026(4)(5). A March 2026 update(4) outlines phased realignment, clearing overgrown sections, refreshed waymarking, and gathering rider input on difficulty bands—approach any posted work carefully and confirm phase on the city site(2). From the Isomäki sports area you roll past ball fields, padel and tennis buildings, Porin maauimala, and Isomäki Areena before entering the wooded block. About a kilometre in, Mestareiden portaat offers a stair-training landmark; deeper in the southern loop you pass Pinomäen kaukalo and, toward Katinkuru, Katinkurun ampumarata. Porin metsän ulkokuntosali appears as the trace climbs back toward Porin urheilukeskuksen stadion and the same service cluster where you started. From this trailhead family you can extend or vary with Porin metsän maastopyöräilyreitti 5 km as a shorter MTB line, Porin metsän kuntorata 7,5 km or Porin metsän maastolenkki 7 km for runners, Katinkurun ulkoilutie 3,4 km on foot, and Porin metsän koirapolku 3 km where the signed dog trail runs. Happy MTB's Pori-area roundup remains a practical read for roots, mud season, and how the loop ties to Niittymaa and Susisuo ideas off this ring(5). Satakunta.fi frames Porin metsä within regional MTB options(6). Carry the city A4 route PDF when junctions feel busy(7).
For maps, trail names around Isomäki, and the wider Porin metsä network, start from the City of Pori outdoor pages for Porin metsä(1). A downloadable A4 route map groups fitness loops, the Veteraani ring, the maastolenkki, and Katinkuru links in one sheet(2). Visit Pori repeats the same practical picture for travellers: parking at Metsämiehenkatu 21, an about 300 ha year-round city forest, and strong links to the national urban park story(3). The trail is about 5 km as one continuous line through the forest, not a loop. Official copy elsewhere on the city site describes the full mountain-bike corridor at roughly six-plus kilometres(4)(5); that is close planning noise against municipality rounding and junction choices—use 5 km when you follow this GPS line. Satakunta.fi’s regional overview notes a marked mountain-bike line in Porin metsä, framed alongside other Satakunta riding areas(7). From the Isomäki sports cluster you are immediately in multi-use outdoor space: the trace passes workout yards and ball fields before dipping into the wooded block where Porin metsän ulkokuntosali offers strength stations and Mestareiden portaat adds a stair-training landmark partway along. Closer to the southern woods you pass Pinomäen kaukalo before the line nears Katinkuru-side facilities. On foot, Katinkurun ulkoilutie 3,4 km shares some of the same corner of the forest; on the bike network, Helppo maastopyörälenkki 7,5 km and Porin metsän maastolenkki 7 km interlace with the same Isomäki trailhead area for longer sessions. Independent rider notes on Happy MTB’s Pori-area list call the classic Porin metsä mountain-bike circuit about 7 km, label it blue on the Finnish MTB difficulty scale, and warn that the eastern half near the airport adds technical root clusters and mud for much of the year(5). Askeleitasuomessa’s walking-focused report still helps orientation: wide gravel and wood-chip boulevards alternate with smaller forest paths, Katinkuru out-and-back is a popular six-kilometre combination, and Metsämiehenkatu 6 or the outdoor pool car parks work for staging(6). Respect other users where running, dog-walking, and cycling networks overlap. From early 2026 the City of Pori has been rebuilding drainage on wetland crossings with filter fabric and light gravel, planning wider re-lineation later in the year, and gathering rider feedback for difficulty zoning(4)(5). Treat maintenance windows as live: approach signed work zones slowly and check the city notice for the current phase(4). Free guided fatbike taster rides in Porin metsä use City of Pori bikes and start beside Porin maauimala’s winter-swimming pool; sessions appear a few weeks at a time on the dedicated enrolment page(8).
The route is about 4.1 km as one continuous leg, leaving the Kirjurinluoto park island in central Pori and following wide, well-kept gravel toward the Kalafornia golf side through the Huvilajuova villa landscape beside Kokemäenjoki. Visit Finland’s Pori cycling overview treats it as an easy family ride through open field scenery after you leave the island parking area, aimed toward services at the golf end of the corridor(1). City of Pori materials for the national urban park collect route and themed map links on an interactive story map that also points visitors toward Visit Pori’s wider outdoor listings(2). Visit Pori’s Kirjurinluoto pages describe the island as the city’s central park—beach, children’s traffic garden, disc golf, summer animals—and link onward to path hubs on the island(3). Near the arena cluster at the Kirjurinluoto end you pass Kirjurinluodon frisbeegolfpuisto and winter ice-loop infrastructure names familiar from the shared outdoor grid, with Areenan nuotiopaikka offering a campfire stop and Polsanluodon nuotiopaikka sitting closer to the Polsanluoto side of the river maze. Treat cottage driveways and riverside junctions with care where gardens and local traffic meet the gravel. The same quayside network connects to Polsanluoto trail (1 km) for a short nature loop on the natural Polsanluoto islet when the hand-drawn ferry runs in season(3), to Kirjurinluodon kuntorata 3,3 km and Kirjurinluodon pitkä latu 850 m for ski-season loops, and to Kesäkierros 1,4 km for a nearby summer walking circuit around the camping shore. After riding you can cool off at Kirjurinluoto’s city beach on the Kokemäenjoki shore(3). Near the golf destination, keep clear of playing corridors and expect golf traffic(1). Pori sijaitsee Satakunnassa, ja reitti on osa laajempaa kansallisen kaupunkipuiston virkistysverkostoa(2).
Kuntoportaat, portaiden pituus 60 m, leveys n. 3 m, askelmia 100 kpl.
6 kpl ulkokuntoiluvälineitä
Penkki +Rekkitanko
Penkki+Rekkitanko
Kahdeksan korin frisbeegolfrata.
Ahlaisten frisbeegolfrataa ylläpitää Ahlaisten nuorisoseura ry.
Tasainen maasto.
Rataa ylläpitää Kyläsaaren Kiinteistönomistajat ry.
Portaiden pituus 25 m.
103 askelmaa.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Pori.
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?).
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