A map of 220 sports and nature sites in Rauma.
A sauna on Lake Turajärvi
An old fisherman's farm, the main building of which serves as a reserve. Sauna. Compost. Pier. Supplies from Rauma city service point Pyyrmann.
Vuorisola has a cabin made from an old courtyard building with a sauna. Drinking water from the well, drinking water must be brought with you. It is about half a kilometer from Kämpa to the beach.
Reservation room and sauna. Reservations: city service point Pyyrman, tel. 02 834 5000.
Vesiluoma–Vuorisola is a point-to-point hiking link of about 2.7 km on Nurmes, the largest island in the Rauma archipelago in the Bothnian Sea. It connects the Vesiluoma reservable wilderness hut area with the Vuorisola end of the island, where the Vuorisola - aikonmaa hut and Vuorisola campfire sit. Metsähallitus describes it as the connector between those two hut areas, with campfires, firewood, and dry toilets associated with the reservable buildings(1). The walking is easy to moderate island forest and rocky ground typical of outer archipelago; marked routes crisscross Nurmes more widely, and the island suits day trips with links to other segments(3). From the Vesiluoma side you start near the Vesiluoma hut and Vesiluoma tulipaikka; very soon you pass Ristos, a named campfire spot in the same coastal cluster. At the far end, Vuorisola tulipaikka and the Vuorisola - aikonmaa hut mark the natural turnaround or overnight goal. Visit Rauma gives practical hut access notes for Vesiluoma—rocky shore, preference for landing at Pihlus when arriving by boat, and booking through the city’s Timmi system with nightly fees(2)—and the same archipelago pages outline how Nurmes fits into longer visits(4). This segment joins the wider Nurmes network: it continues east from the Pihlus–Vesiluoma approach, overlaps in spirit with Päiväranta–Nurmeksennokka near Ristos, and meets the Vuorisola trail at the northern end. Rauma lies in Satakunta; boat taxi and archipelago transport options are summarised for visitors without their own craft(4).
Pihlus–Vesiluoma is a point-to-point hiking trail of about 3.8 km on Nurmes, the largest island in the Rauma archipelago in the Bothnian Sea. It runs inland from the Pihlus boat ramp and marina area toward the Vesiluoma reservable wilderness hut, passing named rest points along the way. For national park context and the official trail listing, start with the Luontoon.fi Pihlus–Vesiluoma trail page(1). Visit Rauma publishes practical access and hut information for Vesiluoma, including the recommendation to use the Pihlus pier for larger boats and the walking connection of about three kilometres from Pihlus toward Vesiluoma(2). Along the route you pass Pinokari and Ristos before reaching Vesiluoma and the Vesiluoma tulipaikka campfire spot at the northern end. The hut area is a natural goal for a day walk or as part of a longer island tour; firewood and an axe are available at the reservable building, and booking runs through the city’s Timmi calendar with a nightly fee(2). Retkipaikka describes Nurmes as criss-crossed by marked paths and links the Pihlus shore—including Pihluksen säikkä—to wider paddling and hiking days in Selkämeri National Park(3). HHikers recounts a multi-day Selkämeri trip where paddling and walking stages used Pihlus and Vesiluoma before continuing toward Nurmeksennokka, which shows how this land segment fits archipelago itineraries(4). The trail ties into other marked links on Nurmes: from the same Pihlus shore you can connect to Pihlus-Pihluksensäikkä toward the western headland, to Päiväranta-Lemmenpuhti and Päiväranta-Nurmeksennokka for east-west crossings, and from Vesiluoma onward to Vesiluoma-Vuorisola. Rauma lies in Satakunta; Nurmes is a strong day-trip destination with boat taxi and transport options described on the archipelago visitor pages(5).
Kodisjoki nature trail is about 3.1 km through forest in Kaikula in eastern Rauma, Satakunta—a short, varied walk rather than a full loop, so you retrace the same path for the return leg. For maps and the city-maintained digital route catalogue, start from Visit Rauma’s hiking trails hub(1); the City of Rauma publishes Rauma-area hiking, forest, and exercise routes through Outdooractive with links from the city’s outdoor-routes pages(2). Along the route you pass nature interpretation boards and can make a short side trip to a lean-to off the main marked path; there is also a campfire spot. A burial cairn is visible beside the trail(3). The trail is marked with bird symbols on trees, enough to follow without a separate map in normal conditions(3). A compact running track, Kodisjoen kuntorata, lies on the same outdoor corridor for anyone who wants a quicker lap after the walk. Kodisjoki village sits in countryside southeast of central Rauma; Outdoors Satakunta describes a longer Rauma–Kodisjoki cycling loop through small villages and local museums if you want to combine forest walking with a wider day in the area(4). Nearby on Kodisjoentie, the City of Rauma lists Lähdepello outdoor-gym and fitness-stair facilities separate from this trailhead—useful if you are already in the village for a full active day(2).
Päiväranta–Nurmeksennokka is about 4 km as one walking segment on Nurmes, the largest island in the Rauma archipelago in the Bothnian Sea. It runs from the Päiväranta shore and boat-launch area toward the rocky cape at Nurmeksennokka, through easy forest and shoreline terrain that belongs to the same marked Nurmes trail network as the island’s other day hikes. For GPX downloads, route previews, and the full catalogue of Rauma archipelago trails, the City of Rauma points visitors to its outdoor routes hub, which links to Outdooractive(1). Visit Rauma describes Nurmes as having trails across the whole island in relatively easy terrain, with connections via link routes so you can stitch together well over ten kilometres in a day; the archipelago overall offers on the order of 30 km of marked hiking routes, including areas that belong to the Bothnian Sea National Park(2)(3). Access without your own boat is possible using boat taxis and other water services(2). You start at Päiväranta and the Päiväranta - veneenlaskupaikka boat ramp. About 0.8 km in you pass Pinokari, then Ristos and the Vesiluoma area: the Vesiluoma reservable wilderness hut and Vesiluoma tulipaikka sit beside the path where this segment meets Pihlus–Vesiluoma and Vesiluoma–Vuorisola. The endpoint is Nurmeksennokka, about 3.9 km from the start along the line. From the same network you can branch at the start onto Päiväranta–Lemmenpuhti toward Lemmenpuhti, follow Pihlus–Vesiluoma from Pinokari toward Pihlus, or continue from Lemmenpuhti on Lemmenpuhti–Nurmeksennokka if you build a longer loop. Independent trip writing that includes Nurmeksennokka notes a campfire, a small lean-to style shelter, and sheltered tent spots among high rocks on the windy cape—useful detail when you plan a break or an overnight in fair weather(4).
For regulations, trail facts, and the latest national-park guidance on this route, start with the Rohela–Uusalmi page on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Rauma introduces Reksaari as a family-friendly archipelago destination with marked hiking trails and overnight options at the Rohela reservable hut(2). Outdoors Satakunta’s Reksaari page describes how the island’s nature-trail markings work along the shoreline and forest sections, including the branch toward the Uusalmi campfire area(3). The trail is about 4.1 km on Reksaari, north of Rauma in Satakunta, within the Bothnian Sea National Park (Selkämeri) landscape. The route runs from the Rohela croft area toward the Uusalmi shore and the Rohela tulipaikka campfire spot. About 1.2 km along the route you reach the Uusalmi area; Rohela and Rohela tulipaikka sit in the same southern cluster on the island, so you can combine a short break at the fire ring with a look at the historic Rohela fisher’s croft—overnight stays at Rohela are booked through the City of Rauma’s tourism services(2)(5). Retkipaikka’s packraft story to Rohela paints the croft’s atmosphere and the island’s mixed spruce forest, shoreline, and leafy western woods on a longer walk around Reksaari(4). The same island trail network links naturally to Omenapuunmaan luontopolku and Reksaaren luontopolku, which share Rohela and the campfire area on their lines—useful if you want a wider loop after the Rohela–Uusalmi segment. Rauma lies a short boat trip away; the City of Rauma and Visit Rauma summarise boat access, guest harbour services, and seasonal connections for reaching Reksaari(2)(5).
For planning walks on Rauma’s archipelago trails, start with Visit Rauma’s archipelago hiking trails page(1) and the Nurmes island introduction on Visit Rauma(2). The City of Rauma also points visitors to its wider outdoor route catalogue through Outdooractive(3). Vuorisola is a very short hiking segment on Nurmes, the largest island in the Rauma archipelago, in Satakunta. As one continuous line it is about 0.4 km and not a loop. It connects the Vuorisola–Aikonmaa reservation-hut area with the Vuorisola campfire spot at the far end of the segment—useful as a coffee stop or short leg when you are already moving along the island’s marked paths. On our map the same corridor continues as the Vesiluoma–Vuorisola hiking route (about 2.7 km), which runs from the Vesiluoma wilderness hut past Ristos and the Vesiluoma campfire to these Vuorisola stops. Visit Rauma describes access to the Vesiluoma hut from Pihlus: about 3 km of hiking from the pier, with a rocky shoreline that makes landing your own boat less ideal(4). Nurmes offers a full network of marked hiking routes in easy terrain; distances add up quickly when you link connectors(2). Retkipaikka’s kayaking and walking account notes signed trails across the island, a long-distance trail running event, and that much of Nurmes is nature reserve with part of the area in Selkämeri National Park—helpful background for how this short link sits in the wider landscape(5). Rauma lies in Satakunta. Combine Vuorisola with other Nurmes routes or with a boat or water taxi day if you are exploring the archipelago.
For the official trail sheet and maintained outdoor description, start with Luontoon.fi’s Reksaaren luontopolku page(1). Visit Rauma introduces Reksaari as a family-friendly archipelago day-trip island and points to marked hiking routes, rowing access from Omenapuunmaa, and overnight options including the bookable shelter at Rohela(2). The City of Rauma lists Reksaari among Rauma’s nature trails and steers walkers to map apps and printable GPX via the same regional route hub used for the archipelago network(3). Outdoors Satakunta walks through the nature trail turn-by-turn and gathers harbour codes, season transport notes, and tips for sturdy footwear on rooty and rocky stretches(4). Reksaari Nature Trail is about 3,2 km on Reksaari in the northern Rauma archipelago, Satakunta. The line is not a closed circuit. Along the way you move from shoreline forest toward Rohela tulipaikka, roughly halfway, where the same trail junction links to Rohela-Uusalmi and Omenapuunmaan luontopolku; follow those names on our pages if you want a longer loop toward Uusalmi or back through Omenapuunmaa. The main path is marked in white paint; a yellow-marked branch follows Outdoors Satakunta’s description toward the Uusalmi campfire spur, returning to the junction before the trail finishes across rockier needle forest toward the Reksaaren retkikeskus courtyard(4). Information boards along the route summarise island history and wildlife. Terrain mixes shoreline paths, hardwood groves, mire edges, and rocky pinewoods, with enough uneven ground that trail runners still treat it as a walking trail first(4). The island lies partly in a Natura 2000 patch; carry litter out to marked waste points near services as local guidance asks(4). Services cluster at Reksaaren retkikeskus and Rohela: café, rental sauna complex, camping and cabin beds, dry toilets near the centre, Rohela, and the Uusalmi spur end, plus maintained campfire places such as Rohela tulipaikka(2)(4). Summer boat access, taxis, and optional late-season water-bus slots are spelled out on the same regional page and on Visit Rauma(2)(4).
Kuuskajaskari Geology Trail is a short marked geology walk on Kuuskajaskari, a former coastal fortress island off Rauma in Satakunta. The trail is about 1.1 km and sits in Bothnian Sea National Park scenery together with the wider island paths. Metsähallitus lists this route on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Rauma summarises scheduled boat access, guest harbour capacity, and the mix of nature, bedrock stories, and fortress heritage that makes a day on the island(2). The island blends military history with coastal forest and rocky shoreline. You can still see decommissioned coastal guns, trenches, fire-control and observation towers, and other fortress structures described for visitors on the island and tourism pages(2)(4). For what it feels like on the ground, Retkeilyä Satakunnassa ja muualla Suomessa walked the marked paths and highlights a diabase seam, a small mire called Riitan suo tucked in a rock cavity, and wide sea views from the old weather-observation tower climb(3). Near the geology trail, Kuuskajaskari.fi points visitors to a stone workshop (kivipaja) exhibition that explains the island’s bedrock alongside the geology walk(4). Along this route you pass practical stops from near the landing toward the south of the island: Kuuskajaskari Grillikota 3 sits very close to the start—handy for shelter or a meal break if you use the kota. About 1 km along, Kuuskajaskari Nuotiopaikka 1 offers a campfire spot, and Kuuskajaskari Tulipaikka 2 lies just beyond for another fire ring in the southern part of the walk. Use these for picnics and remember normal fire rules and litter etiquette in the national park. Rauma lies on the west coast of Finland. Satakunta’s archipelago here is easy to combine with Old Rauma town and harbour life on the mainland when you plan ferry times.
Monna–Ooperi is a marked nature and cycling route of about 5.3 km on the south side of Rauma in Satakunta, linking the Ooperi sports area with forest and lakeshore near Kodisjoentie and Pitkäjärvi. Luontoon.fi carries the trail listing for planning and maps(1), and the City of Rauma’s downloadable Monna–Ooperi nature-trail PDF still shows the yellow main line and nearby tracks(2). Rauman Latu notes that the local outdoors association built the route together with sports club Rasti-Lukko and the City of Rauma(3). For riding and walking character, the line mixes lakeshore paths, forest and rocky ground on Ryssänkallio, and stretches on the Kodisjoentie light-traffic path past the Lähdepello outdoor hub. Askeleita Suomessa describes easy overall difficulty, a shoreline segment when circling clockwise from Ooperi, a short asphalt stretch between forest sections, and wet hollows after rain, so waterproof footwear can help(4). Johannes Leppävuori’s Rauma MTB notes call Monna–Ooperi an approachable ride for beginners aside from a couple of very short technical spots, highlight Ryssänkallio bedrock, and remind riders to carry firewood for the lean-to fire ring(5). Along the mapped line you pass Ooperin Sup’Air-kenttä near the western end, then curve toward the dense Lähdepello sports cluster where facilities such as Lähdepellon tenniskentät, Lähdepellon ulkokuntolaitteet, Lähdepellon tekojää, and Tuki-Areena sit just off the corridor. The same hub connects to Lähdepellon kuntorata for running and Lähdepellon latu when snow permits. Roughly midway, Ryssänkallion laavu offers a fire pit on a bring-your-own-wood basis. Treat winter use as unsupported; club pages and secondary listings describe no grooming for this nature trail.
Pinokari on vanha kalastajatila, josta päärakennus on palanut vuonna 1977. Rannassa ei ole laituria, mutta muutama pienvene sopii rantaan. Isommilla veneillä voi ajaa Päivärannan laituriin ja kävellä sieltä polkuja pitkin Pinokariin, matkaa tulee kilometrin verran. Varauslato, missä voi yöpyä. Ei puuhuoltoa. Kesäisin lampaita.
Kaksi nuotiopaikkaa rannalla, puuhuolto. Rantautua voi, vaikka tupa olisi vuokrakäytössä.
Grillikatos, polttopuita.
Rohelan varaustupa ja nuotiopaikka. Laituriin saa rantautua, vaikka tupa olisi varattu. Polku Uusalmen nuotiopaikalle ja luontopolku.
Nuotiopaikka. Ei puuhuoltoa. Erittäin kaunista aluetta.
Pieni laavu, jossa nuotiopaikka. Polttopuita, huussi. Kaksi poijua peräkiinnitykseen, syvä ranta.
Kataviston alueella on nuotiopaikka, sauna ja huvila, jota voi vuokrata yksityiseen käyttöön kaupungin palvelukeskus Pyyrmannista. Nuotiopaikkaa voi käyttää muutkin, jos huvilaa ei ole vuokrattu. Polttopuita, huussi, huono uimamahdollisuus.
Nurmeksennokasta avautuu avomeri ja kovimmilla tuulilla rantakallioille käy aikamoinen tyrsky. Veneellä Nurmeksennokkaan ei kannata tulla, koska siellä on aina maininkeja, eikä veneelle ole paikkaa. Vene kannattaa jättää vaikka Päivärannan laituriin ja kävellä noin 3.5 km matka polkuja pitkin. Nuotiopaikka, jossa on pieni laavu. Kuivakäymälä. Komposti. Puuhuolto.
Lisätty 2021 3 kpl painopakallisia kuntoilulaitteita.
Painopakallisia ulkokuntolaitteita 5 kpl.
Väyliä 9. Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Väyliä 9. Kumpuileva, jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Tasainen maasto. Ylläpitäjä Rauman Frisbee ry. Väyliä 9.
Parkkipaikka osoitteessa Loukostentie 121. Rata alkaa n. 80 m päästä Loukostentien varrelta. Tasainen maasto.
Väyliä 18 Rata on vaativa
Väyliä 18. Paljon korkeuseroja.
Siirtyy kunnan hoitoon 2025.
Mahdolliset lajit ovat ilmakivääri, ilmapistooli, ilmaolympiapistooli, liikkuva maali sekä putoavat taulut.
Alueella on pienoiskiväärirata, pistoolirata, riistamaalirata, hirvirata, kohdistus-, SRA- ja practical-rata sekä skeet- ja trap-haulikkoradat.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Rauma.
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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