A map of 256 sports and nature sites in Kurikka.
The home has a barbecue site and trees in the home. There is a wooden in the yard.
The so -called hunting club owned by the game. Large rag. The home has a barbecue site, trees and wood in the yard. The home has electric lights. Along the chargers.
Särkisen tupa
Pässilä nature trail is a marked hiking route of about 11.6 km between Jurva’s Tainuskylä area in Kurikka and the Kalajaisjärvi shore in Ilmajoki, South Ostrobothnia. The trail threads through forest and rocky ground on the Pässilänvuori Natura 2000 site, where Environment.fi describes herb-rich woodland, mires, cliffs, and a flying squirrel population alongside the protected habitat mosaic(4). For printable maps, mobile route views, and the municipal sports contact, start from the City of Ilmajoki page(1). The City of Kurikka situates the same corridor inside the wider Kurjen kierros network between Rajavuori and Kalajaisjärvi, with Levaneva access points such as Maalarinmaa and Peräkylä feeding the long-distance trail(2). Metsähallitus documents the Levaneva nature reserve hiking line on Luontoon.fi as Leveneva vaellusreitti—helpful background if you plan to combine this outing with the mire boardwalks farther north(3). Near the first kilometre you pass local outdoor facilities at Tainuskylän maauimala, Pässilän hiihtomaja, Pässilän pieni liikuntasali, and Tainuksen pallokenttä—useful landmarks if you approach from Tainuskyläntie. About 7.4 km from the recorded start you reach Heikin laavu, where the route meets Crane Trail and the Ilmajoki section of Kurjen Kierros. Retkeile Lakeuksilla describes two lean-tos facing each other, a large fireplace with benches and tables, a sleeping shelter, a small wilderness hut, and a dry toilet; the site is roughly 1.8 km from the Jurvantie trailhead on the Kalajaisjärvi side and has no supplied firewood, so carry your own fuel(5). Taikapolku’s walk report notes mixed pine and spruce forest, small streams, and open rock faces below Sikakallio, with clear enough markings for straightforward navigation on the ground(6). Ilmajoki also publishes an optional longer loop of about 17 km around Kalajaisjärvi alongside the roughly 11 km core mapped here(1). If you need the wider Crane Trail story, shelters, and booking context for Rajavuori or Kalajaisjärvi, use the same municipal pages and Luontoon.fi trail materials(1)(2)(3).
Start with the Leveneva hiking route page on Luontoon.fi(1) for Metsähallitus trail facts for this Levaneva section. The City of Kurikka links that page and spells out how to reach Maalarinmaa and Peräkylä parking for the Rajavuori–Levaneva–Pässilä trail system(2). Visit Seinäjoki Region describes the wider Kurjen kierros network across Kurikka, Ilmajoki, and Laihia, where Levaneva’s open fen is the most talked-about stage(3). Luontopolkumies on Retkipaikka recounts a summer walk on Särkisen polku in the same mire complex—worth reading for how duckboards and blue paint marks feel underfoot, plus cloudberry and bilberry picking along the edges(4). The Levaneva Natura 2000 site sheet on ymparisto.fi explains the protected mire and bird values that make it important to stay on marked, lightly built routes(5). The trail is about 13.6 km as one point-to-point line in Kurikka through Levanevan luonnonsuojelualue. It is not a closed loop. The mire is part of one of the largest intact raised-bog landscapes on the Ostrobothnian coast, with extensive boardwalks across wet ground. About 3.4 km from the northern end you reach the Maalarinmaa cluster: Levanevan laavu, Levanevan lintutorni for views over the fen, Maalarinmaa kuivakäymälä, and Maalarinmaa, pysäköintialue a short walk away—practical if you join from the car park instead of walking the full line from the north. This junction also lies on Kurjen Kierros and Kurjenkierros, so you can plan a longer Crane Trail day or multi-day circuit continuing toward Rajavuori or Pässilä as described in regional materials(3). Further south, around 11 km along the route, the Särkinen cluster adds Särkinen polttopuusuoja - kuivakäymälä, Särkinen tulentekopaikka, and Särkinen, autiotupa—an obvious overnight or long lunch stop with firewood storage and a campfire place on the yard. Near the southern end, about 13 km in, Peräkylä, pysäköintialue gives a second road access option on Tainuskyläntie. Allow roughly four to seven hours through the mire depending on pace, photography, and birdwatching breaks. Kurikka lies in South Ostrobothnia. For the latest on closures or maintenance on the wider network, combine Luontoon.fi(1) with the city trail hub(2).
The Sällinpolku nature trail is about 5 km in Jurva, Kurikka, in South Ostrobothnia. It follows the shores of Lake Säläisjärvi through forest, duckboards, and short gravel and shore sections. For the trail map, trailhead coordinates, and the latest local updates, start from the City of Kurikka(1) Sällinpolku page. Visit Kurikka(2) summarises the route as a circuit around the lake and points to the services along the beach and camping area. Along the way you pass Säläisjärven frisbeegolfrata, Säläisjärven uimaranta, Säläisjärven beachvolleykenttä, and Säläisjärven kalastusalue, then Camping Jurvan uimapaikka on the north shore — a compact cluster of swimming, games, fishing, and camping facilities next to the path. The trail shares ground with the wider outdoor network at the lake: Rauhankankaan latu runs on the same corridor in places, and the winter cycling route Talvipyöräilyreitti Sällicamping-Pöhlönmäki-Lintuluoma-ampumarata overlaps the line; Jurvan ensilumen latu is nearby for early-season skiing. On Rauhankankaan latu, Leijonalaavu offers a shelter deeper along the ski line if you combine routes in winter. Käräjävuori blog adds ground-level detail from a summer hike on Sällinpolku(3): the first section feels like a wide fitness-trail surface before the path narrows into smaller forest tracks; the southeast shore can stay damp after rain, so sturdy footwear helps; there is a short bridge crossing, duckboards past a boat launch, and a lean-to shelter feeling at the south beach where anglers also spend time. That mix of easy walking, lake views, and small infrastructure makes the route a practical outing for families and casual hikers in Kurikka.
Ponsineva circuit trail is about 2.7 km of marked hiking through a wet mire landscape southwest of Jalasjärvi in Kurikka, South Ostrobothnia. Retkeile Lakeuksilla gathers Kurikka’s trail and lean-to ideas across the municipality, including context on its Natura mires and peatland protection sites(1). The walk is a compact day trip: you pass two lean-tos, Ponsineva laavu - 2 Kurikka right at the beginning and Ponsineva laavu - 1 roughly six tenths of a kilometre farther along, then reach Ponsineva pysäköinti at the route end by the parking lot. Laavu.org lists coordinates and a downloadable GPX for the Ponsineva shelter for anyone syncing a phone or GPS before heading out(2). Terrain is typical western Finnish spruce mire: soft peat and pools between forested rides. Jorma Murto’s Luontoretkiä blog describes keeping to duckboards on the open mire, choosing drier weather when possible, and listening for cranes over the bog—useful on-the-ground perspective for footwear and pace(3). The view from the lean-tos toward the mire and the reedy lake margin is part of what makes short visits rewarding, even when mosquitoes are busy in late spring. If you want a longer outing, independent trip notes from the same area describe combining Ponsineva with tracks around nearby Ponsijärvi into roughly an eight-kilometre circuit on the ground; that goes beyond this single 2.7 km trail but is a natural extension for fit hikers who carry a map(3). Kurikka hosts several larger loop hikes nearby—for example Ketunlenkki and Samuli Paulaharjun polku are described on Retkeile Lakeuksilla for visitors who outgrow a short mire walk(1). Ponsineva laavu - 1 and Ponsineva laavu - 2 Kurikka are simple windbreaks for lunch breaks; bring your own stove fuel if you plan to cook and pack out litter. Ponsineva pysäköinti works well as a car end point after walking through the shelters. Dry toilets may be present at maintained rest spots in the municipality’s wider outdoor network; check current service notices on Retkeile Lakeuksilla or Kurikka pages before relying on a specific facility.
Nuija- ja Ilkanpolun jatkos is a very short hiking link in Tuiskula, Kurikka, in South Ostrobothnia. It connects Nuijapolku with Ilkka Trail so you can walk from the Nuijapolku network onto the long-distance Ilkka Trail without a road detour. The trail is about 0.2 km end to end as recorded for this segment. For map downloads, trailhead addresses, and how the transfer fits the wider network, start with the City of Kurikka’s Nuijapolku page(1). Visit Suupohja describes the same connection for visitors to the Suupohja area(2). Official material treats this connection as part of the siirtymäreitti from the Kärrymies trailhead area: follow the route via Poikarämäkkä and Lellunharju to join Ilkka Trail. On the city map the transfer is shown as a blue line leading to Ilkka Trail(1)(2). Ilkka Trail continues from the Kurikka–Ilmajoki area toward Seinäjoki along Kyrkösjärvi; Visit Seinäjoki Region outlines the full corridor and rest places on Ilkka Trail(3). KOMIA Flow’s Ilkka Trail event materials note that the early part of their route uses Nuijapolku before Nuijapolku meets Ilkka Trail, and that Ilkka Trail is marked with yellow paint blazes on the ground—useful context once you are on Ilkka Trail after the junction(4). This segment itself is a brief forest link for hikers who already use Nuijapolku or Ilkka Trail; it does not add separate shelters or services beyond what those main routes provide. Kurikka lies in South Ostrobothnia; Tuiskula is part of Kurikka.
Autionmaa nature trail is about 14.1 km as one walking line on the forest and hill country along the Kurikka–Kauhajoki boundary, in South Ostrobothnia. The City of Kurikka publishes trailhead addresses, a downloadable route map, and map links for the Autionmaan luontopolut network—often called the Paulapieksut routes after the local club that supports the area(1). Visit Kurikka describes the wider network as two main options: the longer Laitasaari nature loop at roughly 13 km with plenty of relief, and the shorter Flintanoja path at about 5.5 km starting from the Paulapieksut cabin; an alternate start for the longer tour is Laitasaari ski lodge on the Kauhajoki side(2). Along the longer circuit, sources list lean-to shelters at comfortable spacing—including Hanneksen laavu near Laitasaari ski lodge, the reservable Paulapieksut hut and cabin, and Kiuasvuoren laavu on Kiuasvuori(2). Kurikan Paulapieksut ry’s pages show signing in the terrain and photo impressions from the ridges and forest(3). For ground-level texture on hot-weather outings, Luontoretkiä describes Autionmaa–Laitasaari tracks mixing sand-covered forest roads with rocky, balance-testing slopes on kiuas-type bedrock—useful colour if you pack footwear and water for a summer day(4). The same long corridor can be combined with Laitasaaren kuntorata, a lit municipal running track that lies on the same alignment. Trail length here follows authoritative open-data geometry for this single published line. Municipal copy rounds the main Laitasaari nature tour to about 13 km while describing the same landscape; treat that as the same trail family with slightly different measuring or rounding(2).
Pahkapolku is a short hiking route in Viitalankylä, Kurikka, in South Ostrobothnia. It leads through forest and field edges toward Pahkavuori, where a lookout tower and the Pahkapesä shelter sit on Pahkakallio rock. The City of Kurikka lists Pahkapolku among its nature trails for the municipality(2). Visit Suupohja gives step-by-step access notes and describes facilities at the destination(1). The trail is about 3.2 km end to end overall; some published descriptions round the distance to about 3.6 km for the walk to the tower(1). The route is not a circuit: you follow a forest-road line from the trailhead and take a marked branch toward the cliffs and viewpoint area(1). At the top, Visit Suupohja mentions a lookout tower and the Pahkapesä cabin, where you can use a grill; a wood shed, well, and dry toilet are nearby(1). In snowy winters the same starting area is used for a ski track as well as the footpath(1). Jorma Murto’s Luontoretkiä blog describes the outing as an easy, attractive walk through woodland and beside fields, and suggests waterproof footwear where stretches stay wet after rain—adding duckboards there would make the path even more inviting(3).
Korven Jotos is a hiking trail network in Korvenkylä and Hakuni in Kurikka, South Ostrobothnia, near the Mieto village area. The trail is about 12.8 km as mapped here as a point-to-point line from the Korventie side toward Hakuni. That shape works well as a cross-network walk, while the City of Kurikka describes four separate marked loop options—Korven Jotos I (4.3 km), II (4.2 km), III (6.9 km), and Lohiluoman Jotos (about 7.2 km)—with multiple trailheads and a printable PDF map(1). Research cited on the city’s pages ranks this area among the most species-rich of Kurikka’s nature trails despite modest elevation change(1). Retkeile Lakeuksilla summarises the wider Kurikka outdoor picture and notes roughly 23 km of marked trails in the Korven and Lohiluoma Jotos area, with six lean-tos and a kota among the facilities listed for the network(2). For the most up-to-date mix of route choices, lean-to names, and winter access notes, Visit Suupohja’s Korven Jotos article is a practical companion to the city page: it outlines each loop’s lean-tos (for example Ylevä and Kalliojärvi on Jotos I, Korpi and Matin on several routes, Kuusinen on Lohiluoman Jotos) and explains that some routes are tamped in winter for walking, with current conditions posted to the area’s Facebook group(3). Along the line used here, you begin near Korven kenttä on Korventie 136—one of the City of Kurikka’s listed starts for Korven Jotos III (Korpilinna rest stop area)—and approach the Hakuni end near Hakunin ampumahiihdon harjoitusalue, where Mietan latu 3km and Mietaan kuntorata meet the same sports area(1). That makes it easy to combine a forest hike with a short ski or running loop on local tracks when snow and opening hours suit you. Jorma Murto’s Luontoretkiä write-up from spring 2020 praises the clear markings even through recent cutover forest, calls out a detour atmosphere toward Lohiluoma, and describes the lean-tos as well kept—useful colour for what the terrain feels like on the ground(4). Kurikka is the largest municipality in South Ostrobothnia; Korvenkylä and Hakuni sit among its dispersed villages and forest blocks west of the main town.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja. Ratakarttoja on ilmoitustaululla olevassa laatikossa, jonne voi myös jättää löytyneet kiekot.
Tasainen maasto. Rata on koululaisten käytössä koulupäivien ajan ja kaikkien pelaajien käytössä kouluaikojen ulkopuolella.
Kuntoportaissa 70 askelmaa
403 askelmaa.
Videokameranäytöt.
22 mekaanista taululaitetta, joissa on nauhataulut, yksi haulikkosimulaattori sekä Noptel-ammunnanharjoittelulaite. Sijaitsee Tarinahotellin alakerrassa.
Maalarinmaa luontotorni
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Kurikka.
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