A map of 1200 sports and nature sites in South Karelia.
Satamosaari Beach Sauna Times you can book a private 1 hour sauna shift: 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. The reservation lists are at the sauna, you just sign up there.
A really cool suana on an island called Satamosaari, just outside Lappeenranta Finland. You can rent Primarily day use, but in special cases it is possible to stay overnight. The hut works like a desert hut in that it cannot be reserved, but the door is kept open for all visitors. The sauna can be used independently.
Built in a prehistoric model for the Stone Age residence, the dwelling is a pause for hikers.
In the vicinity of the Mikkolanniemi Action Center.
The Onkilampi lean -to has access to unobstructed access from the parking lot.
A closed -end with fireplace inside.
The day -to -day basis Tornator Oy has provided for public use in agreement with the municipality of Ruokolahti.
In the Oronmylly area, a 2-sided hut along the Aate-Pekka path. Rise from Koda to the Suurvuori viewpoint.
Along the Route of the Pöröpeikonpolku and Borders (E10). In the vicinity of the lean -to, a reservation sauna, which is available in advance for payment. Reservations: Parikkala skiing and boys, 050-465 2462.
Haikola Nature Trail is about 0.8 km of easy walking in Haikola village in northern Taipalsaari, South Karelia, beside the Karvajala wetland where Karvajalanjoki flows toward Lake Pien-Saimaa. For up-to-date access, services, and how this stop fits Taipalsaari’s wider hiking network, start with Visit Taipalsaari(1). The City of Taipalsaari also points visitors to Visit Taipalsaari and Etelä-Karjalan virkistysaluesäätiö for route descriptions and regional outdoor information(2). On the boardwalks and path you can explore shoreline nature, hunting culture, and wildlife and habitat management along the river and wetland. Visit Taipalsaari describes the route as partly accessible and notes a small boat dock along the way(1). About 0.77 km from the start you reach Haikolan laavu, where you can pause at the lean-to and campfire area in a compact day-trip setting. The Karvajala wetland has been developed over time with local volunteers and partners. Pien-Saimaa community reporting describes the first major Karvajalanjoki wetland project in 2001–2002, when the wetland earthworks were built together with Haikolan laavu and the boardwalks leading toward it—work tied to Karvajalanjoki ry’s long-running stewardship of the stream and marsh(3). Taipalsaari is a lake-rich municipality in the Saimaa archipelago; this short trail is a practical introduction to Pien-Saimaa shoreline habitats without a long hike.
Pärsäniemi nature trail is about 1.4 km of easy walking on a forested peninsula on Lake Kivijärvi in Luumäki, South Karelia. For current services, distances to Taavetti and Jurvala, and what is maintained at the site, start with the City of Luumäki hiking routes page(1). The municipality describes Pärsäniemi as a nature reserve shore destination: an accessible path of about 500 m runs from the Tyynilahti parking area (by the carpet-washing point) to Pärsäniemen laavu, and a separate forest path circles the peninsula for roughly 1.5 km in total; facilities include a lean-to, campfire place, woodshed, and toilet(1). The Väliväylän melontareitti kayaking route passes right beside the peninsula, so paddlers can land at the lean-to as well(1). About 0.4 km along the route you reach Pärsäniemen laavu on the Kivijärvi shore—a natural lunch stop with a campfire ring and views across the water. Luontopolkumies describes the approach through older spruce forest as wide and fully accessible, with a short duckboard stretch where the surface can be slippery when wet(2). Beyond the lean-to the forest loop follows the peninsula with modest ups and downs; waymarking is clear to the shelter, while the loop relies more on shoreline cues(2). Birdwatchers often scan the bays for waterfowl(1). Näitä polkuja tallaan captures the sandy beach by the lean-to and the long pier and boathouse scenery back at Tyynilahti after a short walk(3). Nearby you can also join longer regional routes: Väliväylän reitti, Etelä-Karjalan osuus follows the paddling corridor past the point; Jäälatu Jurvala–Perälä winter ski track and Itsenäisyydentie biking route pass close enough for a combined day out.
Ruokolahti is in South Karelia. For printable maps, how the Lääväkorpi–Syväjärvi loop and Mustakulkku loop fit together, and how this network links to the Ruokolahti–Rautjärvi E10 leg, start with Visit Ruokolahti(1). Metsähallitus lists the route on Luontoon.fi(2) alongside other outdoor destinations in the municipality. City of Ruokolahti(3) summarises the wider outdoor offer: from short nature paths to very long hikes, with winter ski tracks and beaches as well. The trail is about 43.3 km as one continuous hiking route in this database. It is not a loop. Official material describes Ruokolahti’s own hiking network as two main loops that you can join into roughly a 40 km circuit, plus the Ruokolahti–Rautjärvi connection that belongs to the European E10 long-distance trail system(1). Terrain varies from ridges and forest tracks to lake shores—typical South Karelia harju and water scenery. The route follows a leave-no-trace approach on the ground: pack out what you bring, as bins are not provided along many forest sections(1). From the northern end of the line you pass Kirkonkylän koulun lähiliikuntapaikka Ruokolahti and soon reach the same trail hub as Kyläniemen kierros, Rasilan valaistu kuntorata, and the short E10 Imatra–Ruokolahti walking link. About 10 km into the route, Myllykosken laavu - Myllylampi sits by the Myllykoski rapids between Vasari and Syväjärvi—one of the most talked-about rest spots on the Lääväkorpi–Syväjärvi loop, with a lean-to, campfire places, and dry toilets in line with how independent route guides describe the circuit. Further on, the line runs through Ruokolahti’s central sports area: Toripuiston ulkoliikunta-alue, Ruokolahden ulkokuntoilupaikka, and Ruokolahden keskusurheilukenttä cluster together near Metsolantie—handy for orientation, water, and services before you head back into quieter forest. Near the southern end of this mapped line, Haaroinsalmen laavu sits on the Kaituri shore in the same landscape as Rajojen reitti Ruokolahti (E10), a natural break before longer E10 stages toward Rautjärvi. Where geometries meet, you can branch onto Rajojen reitti Ruokolahti (E10), Rautaesirippureitti Etelä-Karjala, or Ruokolahden melontareitti for paddling on Saimaa. Retkipaikka(4) has described other Ruokolahti paths in depth—for example the sign-rich Hukkavuori nature trail—illustrating how varied the municipality’s trail culture is beyond this backbone network.
The Ukonmäki nature trail is about 1 km as a loop through shoreline forest beside Lake Saimaa in Joutseno, which is part of Lappeenranta in South Karelia. It is an easy, mostly dry forest path with little elevation change. For municipal listings of nature trails and the wider forest recreation network, start with the City of Lappeenranta recreation areas and nature trails hub(1). The loop’s strength is varied greenery along the shore: the route passes about seventeen information boards on local plants, place names, and history. Boards explain, for example, that Likosenlahti is named after flax soaking, and that Pöyhiä sawmill operated in the area in the 1920s–1930s with its chimney still noted across the water(2). There are lake views in a few spots, a changing cubicle if a swim in Saimaa appeals, and a rest area at the eastern tip of Ukonniemi with a welcome sign and a small map showing the board locations(2). A detailed walk report on Retkipaikka found the boards plentiful and engaging and spent well under half an hour on foot without a long break—easy to combine with a harbour stop(2). In winter the maintained ski track Muukonsaaren latu runs in the same Joutseno shoreline area toward Muukonsaari; skiers reach facilities such as Muukonsaaren retkikeskus, Muukonsaaren grillikatos, and Muukonsaaren nuotiopaikka farther along that line. Boats to Muukonsaari are discussed from the Joutseno harbour address Poijutie 4 in regional geopark material(3). The island’s own nature trail and rocky shores are a separate walk, reached by water(3).
Lammassaari nature trail is about 3.8 km on Lammassaari, a ridge island in Lake Saimaa within Imatra’s Ukonniemi recreation area in South Karelia. Imatran kaupunki maintains the official web page for this trail with the brochure, QR-linked nature posts, and season tips(1). GoSaimaa situates the walk in the wider Saimaa holiday region and repeats practical basics such as the two rest spots (kota and laavu), the 31 numbered nature posts, and that camping or overnight stays are not allowed on the island(2). The island is part of the Saimaa UNESCO Global Geopark; Saimaa Geopark describes the delta landform, ancient shorelines, kettles including the prominent kettle near the western shore, veined gneiss boulders toward the north, and Stone Age shore sites from a higher Lake Saimaa phase—background that makes the signage and sea-facing benches easier to appreciate(3). Along the line you soon reach Lammassaaren laavu, then—after roughly a kilometre along beaches and bays—Ukonlinnan uimaranta, Ukonlinnan beach volleyball courts, and Ukonlinna cluster on Ukonlinna point, good for combining a swim or a pause with the hike. Farther along, about midway in distance, Lammassaaren kota sits on the western shore with a nearby kettle and lagoon-style inlet; this is the main sheltered stop named in the municipal text. The return leg uses higher ground inside the island; Imatran kaupunki notes steeper slopes there and recommends sturdy footwear even though the shore sections to nature post 18 are easy underfoot(1). You can also cut the walk short from post 18 toward the small-craft harbour and continue toward Imatra Spa if you prefer a flatter exit toward services(1)(2). In summer the trail network around Ukonniemi adds options without leaving the area: Lammassaaren rantapolku follows the shore as a walking line, Esteetön polku Lammassaaren laavulle is a very short barrier-free link toward the laavu, and Ukonniemen kevyenliikenteen raitti connects toward fitness stairs and an outdoor gym for cyclists or walkers linking facilities. Winter visitors often pair the island with nearby ski tracks that use the same laavu corner as a junction. Luontopolkumies walked the island clockwise in dry forest and shore heath, clocking about an hour and ten minutes for a hair over four kilometres on the watch, and highlights Saimaa views, several bench–fireplace combinations beside the water, suppa landforms, and numerous flycatchers along the May canopy—useful colour if you like a field-tested pace and marking hints (white rings, yellow–green bands, occasional orange stakes)(4).
Mikonsaari Nature Trail is a short forest and shore walk on Mikonsaari in Lappeenranta, South Karelia, on the Pien-Saimaa island maze west of the city. The trail is about 1.7 km end to end; visitor pages often round the same circuit to about 2 km and split it into two named sections, Lehtipolku and Havulenkki(1)(2). For the fullest trail description—markings, rest spots, and seasonal tips—start with Visit Lappeenranta’s Mikonsaari Nature Trail page(1). GoSaimaa’s Mikonsaari article covers the same basics for Lake Saimaa trip planning(2). Lemin Kirjava’s autumn walk adds ground-level detail on side paths, the spring, and the laavu area(3). From the parking area the route dives into mixed forest: older spruce and pine giving way to damp deciduous pockets, with interpretation on plants such as February daphne where posted(1). A lichen-covered shore cliff looks west over Pien-Saimaa; lower down, fireplaces and a Green Leaf–era laavu with a woodshed, benches, an outdoor dry toilet, and a large wooden dining group offer a proper break(1). You can walk the trail in either direction on red paint blazes and signs; one counter-clockwise reading follows a forest road first toward Niemisenselkä shore, then climbs back through mixed woods toward Mikonsaarentie(1)(2). Wet weather calls for boots, and the trail is family-friendly but not barrier-free(1)(2). The island is a popular paddling day-trip setting—kayak circuits such as Mikonsaaren kierros and Hirvisaaren kierros pass the Mikonsaari- veneenlaskupaikka boat launch on Pien-Saimaa, about 0.65 km along this footpath, and the wider Retkisatamien reitti network links harbours around the city. In winter, Lappeenrannan jääladut ski tracks run through the same waterside network; check current ice and grooming information separately from this summer walking trail. The City of Lappeenranta has also offered free rowing-boat hops across Pappilansalmi to link shoreline routes—see Visit Lappeenranta for booking rules if you plan to combine with Pappilanniemi or Taipalsaari cycling(1).
For up-to-date information on municipal trails, lit exercise paths, and winter routes around Joutseno, start with the City of Lappeenranta’s kuntopolut and hiking pages, which also note the winter trail network from Joutseno sports centre and the multifunction kota in the same area(1). Visit Lappeenranta’s hiking guide points to downloadable regional walking-trail PDFs(2). The South Karelia Hiking site adds ideas for trips across the rest of the province(3). The Joutseno–Tujula retkeilyreitti is about 5.2 km on our map as a point-to-point hiking line in the Joutseno district of Lappeenranta, South Karelia. It begins at the Himanmäki wilderness hut and heads toward the Tujula village area along forest paths typical of the Saimaa shoreline countryside. The stretch lines up with the same recreation network as the long Saimaa Canal cycling route toward Nuijamaa, the Ravattila ski-trail network, and the Yhdysladut Ahvenlammelle connection—useful if you are combining a short walk with cycling or skiing days in eastern South Karelia. Lappeenranta is the city that now includes Joutseno. Etelä-Karjala (South Karelia) is known for Lake Saimaa scenery, mixed forest, and many local trails described on the pages above.
The trail is about 0.9 km in Parikkala, South Karelia, crossing Metsähallitus-managed Siikalahti, an overgrown bay of Lake Simpele that ranks among Finland’s richest inland bird wetlands and carries international Natura protection. For current rules, services, and seasonal advice, start from the Siikalahti Nature Reserve hiking pages on Luontoon.fi(1). GoSaimaa(4) sketches why the place draws naturalists: migrating waterfowl in spring and autumn, dense dawn and dusk birdsong in May and June, and interpretive boards with easy paths and boardwalks toward viewing structures. Begin from the Kasinniemi end at Siikalahti pysäköintialue. A dry toilet is available near the parking area; Siikalahti luontotupa sits a few hundred metres along with nature displays, and Siikalahden nuotiokatos and Kasinniemi keittokatos offer sheltered spots for a snack. Kasinniemen lintutorni and Kasinniemi luontotorni rise shortly afterward for views over reeds and pools, while Kasinniemi kaivo sits beside the path for water. Kasinniemi is a designated tent area—check the latest camping rules on Luontoon.fi(1) before pitching. About three quarters of a kilometre along, the dam-road cluster adds another angle: Patotie pysäköintialue, Siikalahden piilokoju, Patotie inva luontotorni, Siikalahti patotien lintulava, and the Ripekesaaren lintutorni, Ripekesaari luontotorni, and Siikalahti lintutorni group give several heights and hides toward open water and islets. Allow time to linger—Via Karelia(3) notes that on migration days a single watch can yield a long species list. Retkipaikka(2) describes an overnight visit from the photographer’s perspective: dusk chorus from marsh warblers, thrushes, and bitterns; boardwalks onto the forested islet and its tower; and Siikalahti luontotuva open round the clock from April through October for self-guided background on the reserve. The account is worth reading for timing tips and the feel of midsummer nights on the bay. The path ties into the wider Parikkala ”bird country” network: Siikalahden lintupolku (Siikalahti Bird Trail) shares the same birding facilities on the ground, Lintuinmaan pyöräilyreitti links longer cycling loops in the region, and Siikalahden retkilatu adds winter ski trail access when snow allows—confirm grooming on official channels.
For printable and digital bike maps, winter maintenance classes, and how this path joins the wider city network, start with the City of Lappeenranta cycling pages(1). VisitLappeenranta describes the Rauha–Tiuru visitor zone on Lake Saimaa as a major outdoor destination about 35 km from the city centre, with shoreline trails and resort services year-round(2). GoSaimaa sums up the same Ukonniemi–Rauha holiday area as a place where lake views, trail networks and rentals make it easy to try cycling or other outdoor kit on holiday(3). This route is about 1.8 km as one continuous shoreline path. It is not a loop. It runs along the Saimaa shore on the Rauha side of Lappeenranta: a compact, easy lakeside corridor shared with other relaxed recreation. Near the start you are close to Holiday Club Saimaa’s resort edge with spa, arena, bowling and padel(4). A little farther along the shore you reach Rauhan uimapaikka for a swim and Rauhan bechvolleykenttä almost beside the path—natural stops for a short family outing. The same shore links in practice to the longer Rauhan alueen pyöräilyreitit line through the resort strip, if you want more distance on asphalt and fine gravel. In winter, Rauhan ladut offers maintained ski tracks nearby, and Repokiven kuntorata is the main fitness-loop option in the same recreation area. The wider Lappeenrannan rantaraitti network is a separate, longer city shore system to the west: roughly 10 km for the main paved section and about 14.8 km in total for the full linked shore routes(5); plan that as its own ride if you are heading from Myllysaari or the city-side shore. Regional press has covered ongoing investment in near-urban nature sites in Lappeenranta, including nature-tourism development for the Rauha area and the future eastern shore extension—it is worth checking current council and resort updates before a visit(6). Expect more walkers and children near the beach and courts in peak season; ride at an easy pace and pass with care.
Suoluonto ja kalkki is a half-day themed cycling loop around Lappeenranta that pairs a rare South Karelia bog reserve with the district’s unusual limestone country and an active quarry landscape. On our map the ride is about 25.6 km as one closed loop; Visit Lappeenranta lists the same route at roughly 25 km among its city-area cycling selections(2). GoSaimaa introduces the outing as a half-day tour combining those themes and describes reaching Hämmäauteensuo on foot: from the trailhead you walk duckboards to a shelter where an open fire is allowed only at the lean-to grill, so pack food and leave the bike locked at the start of the mire path(1). Etelä-Karjala has less mire area than much of Finland, which is why Hämmäauteensuo stands out: roughly 30 hectares of the bog are strict nature reserve and the site is listed in the national mire protection programme, with adjacent patches under METSO forest protection(3). Visit Lappeenranta gives practical access from regional road 390, a signed parking area, and bus lines 300/301 on schooldays versus holidays(3). Trip writers who walked the bog note the contrast between spruce forest and open peat, short duckboard stages, and wildlife such as lizards basking on the planks—useful colour even though your wheels stay on the road network(5). South of the city the route skirts limestone terrain exploited as industrial stone; GoSaimaa highlights views toward the Nordkalk quarry complex and notes Lappeenranta’s mine as Europe’s only producer of the rare mineral wollastonite(1). Treat viewing spots and quarry safety the same way you would any active extraction area: stay on public roads and paths, respect fences and signage, and refresh restrictions before you ride. After the mire detour the mapped loop arcs back through suburban Lappeenranta: Karhuvuori and Myllymäki bring a cluster of ball fields and Karhuvuoren kaukalo, Myllymäen frisbeegolfrata (Lappeenranta), Harapaisen nurmikenttä, Taf Gym, and Louhenpuiston ulkokuntosali before you rejoin denser streets toward the centre. Visit Lappeenranta groups it alongside longer options such as Lappeenrannan kaupunkikierros pyöräilyreitti, Saimaan kanavan sulkureitti pyöräillen, and Taipalsaaren maisemapyöräilyreitti if you want to stitch a longer South Karelia day from the same programme(2).
This line is one of fifteen themed cycling routes developed for South Karelia under a regional project led by the South Karelia Regional Council; travellers follow it on a phone or GPS rather than looking for paint on trees, because the original scheme prioritised digital tracks and future sign budgets were still being sought when the project wrapped(1). For day-to-day cycling infrastructure and path upgrades, the City of Imatra publishes its walking-and-cycling pages(2). On our map the ride is about 39.8 km as one continuous line through Imatra and is not a closed loop, so treat it as a city tour you can start anywhere along the line and ride in either direction. Allow roughly three and a half hours of pedalling if you keep moving, or a full day if you hop off at churches, museums, and cafés(5). Surfaces are mostly asphalt with shorter gravel links typical of suburban connectors(5). Kansallisihme lists the same architecture tour among Imatra’s other cycling ideas(6). The sightseeing story mixes national Romantic grandeur, modernist classics, industrial heritage, and contemporary public buildings. Alvar Aalto’s Church of the Three Crosses at Vuoksenniska (1958) is the city’s best-known piece of modern architecture: the parish association notes how the main hall can be subdivided for simultaneous worship and civic use, and how the church sits on Finland’s UNESCO tentative list via the broader Alvar Aalto entry while also anchoring the European Council’s Alvar Aalto Route and Saimaa Geopark culture stops(3). Down at Imatrankoski, the Imatra State Hotel’s Art Nouveau main building by Usko Nyström opened in 1903 on the rapids; the hotel’s own history pages describe the earlier wooden hotels on the site, the wartime staff headquarters use, post-war rebuilding by Aarne Ervi, and Apu magazine readers voting it Finland’s most beautiful building in 2014 and 2017—context that reads well from a bike as you roll along the waterfront(4). Kolmen Ristin kirkko and Imatran valtionhotelli kylpylä are natural photo stops; Vuoksenniska’s sports campus cluster appears mid-route, while Mansikkala’s outdoor exercise park, Imatrankoski’s sports shoreline, and the dense Ukonniemi arena and beach zone give open space before the route swings back toward Imatran Kylpylä and nearby spa services around Purjekuja. If you want a long border-to-border adventure after sampling the city, the Lappeenranta-Imatra kaupungit rajalla -pyöräilyreitti shares geometry near the start and continues as a roughly 103 km link toward the canal country.
For maps, winter maintenance classes on main and regional paths, and the wider city network, start with the City of Lappeenranta cycling pages(1). The Rauha–Tiuru visitor zone on Lake Saimaa is described by VisitLappeenranta as one of the region’s strongest recreation clusters: versatile trails in the forest and shoreline setting, with gear rental and programme providers for year-round activities including mountain biking(2). GoSaimaa notes the same Ukonniemi–Rauha holiday belt for extensive trail and ski-track networks, rest spots in the lakeshore landscape, and rentals that make it easy to try cycling or other outdoor kit on holiday(3). This segment is about 4.6 km end to end as one continuous path. It is not a loop. It runs through the Rauha side of the resort belt in Lappeenranta: mixed resort paths and shoreline links that suit easy family riding and link the sports and spa shore front. Along the way you pass open-ground riding near Vipelen tallin kenttä, then the Holiday Club Saimaa resort edge with spa, arena, bowling and padel, a beach volleyball court and Rauhan uimapaikka, Atreenalin Seikkailupuisto Saimaa, and Rauhan pallokenttä—together they form the main “things to do” cluster on the water side of the strip. The shoreline connects naturally to Rauhan rantaraitti, a short separate biking and walking shore circuit where swim stops and beach volleyball sit almost on the path. The E10 section: Hinkanranta to Imatra Spa long trail shares the same activity hub near Vipelen tallin kenttä if you mix hiking with biking. For a longer outing on asphalt and gravel, the Saimaa Cycling description of the roughly 103 km Lappeenranta–Imatra border ride—including about 20 km along the Saimaa Canal cycleway—crosses the same wider destination area(4). Guided fatbike trips and hourly-to-weekend fatbike hire aimed at Ukonniemi, Hosseinlahti and Rauha terrain are offered by Tuplakasi-Action, with contact details on GoSaimaa(5). Holiday Club Saimaan Rauha also points guests to Tuplakasi in the activity centre for fatbikes and e-fatbikes and mentions extensive nearby cycling routes plus Imatra’s published summer and winter outdoor maps for wider planning(6). Imatra’s own Ukonniemi introduction underlines the sports campus, frisbee golf and guided outdoor trails around the spa and lake shore on the Imatra side of the same cross-border leisure area(7). Resort roads and shared outdoor corridors can be busy in high season—ride predictably and watch for walkers and children near beaches and courts.
Katokselle esteetön kulkukäytävä risteilylaiturilta. Invakäymälä katoksen läheisyydessä.
Ilkonsaaren ruokailukatos sijaitsee Särkän satamassa. Katoksen lähellä myös käymälä/polttopuukatos.
Nuotiopaikka Sarviniemen uimarannan yhteydessä. Paikalla myös polttopuukatos ja astioiden pesupaikka.
Nuotiokatos Ilkonsaaren hiekkakannaksella.
Nuotiopaikka. Melojille soveltuva rantautumispaikka. Muukonsaaren melontalaiturin grillikatos Grillikatos Muukonsaaren melontalaiturin yhteydessä.
Nuotiokatos Ilkonsaaren eteläpään kalliolla. Upea näköala etelään.
Suomenniemen koulun piha-alue käytössä kouluajan ulkopuolella.
Timo Mikkolan muistolle vuonna 2019 valmistuneet kunto- ja kulttuuriportaat sijaitsevat Hakamäen museoalueella.

Tasainen maasto. Rata on suunniteltu läheisen koulun oppilaita silmällä pitäen.
Vuoksenniskan frisbeekeskus koostuu kahdesta 18 väylän radasta (AM/PRO).
Paljon korkeuseroja.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja. 9-, 18- ja 20-väyläiset ratavaihtoehdot.
Paljon korkeuseroja.

50 askelmaa.
Kuntoportaat rakennettu v. 2023.
45 askelmaa.
Kuntoportaissa on 123 askelmaa ja nousua 25 metriä.
Erilaisia virkistysaltaita, vesihierontapisteitä, Yorokobi-kuuma-allas, porealtaita ja porepenkkejä, kylmä- ja kuuma-altaat, kävely- ja jalka-altaat, vesiverhoja, kallioputous, sateiden silta, kanjoni sekä ympäri vuoden lämmitetty ulkoallas.
Uima-allas, 2 poreallasta ja pienille lapsille sopiva allas.
Discover the diverse landscapes of South Karelia. From cultural sights to hidden natural gems.
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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