A map of 441 sports and nature sites in Mikkeli.
Walking from the nearest marked parking lot about 500 m. Coordinates: 6137.988n, 2717.656e Parking space: Parking space in the parking lots marked off the Kyyhkylä Manor and behind the rehabilitation center. The route to the lean -to Firewood: Inquire about Kyyhkylä Manor. Toilet: not
Turn from Parkkilantie to Parantalantie (a sign at the garden and a milk booth at the intersection). Continue your journey past the garden and turn left after the 24-tielita North House. From this smaller road about 1km, the lean -to remains to the left. Coordinates: 6138,700n, 2728.941e Parking space: At the time of the molten, the car can be park in front of the lean -to. In winter, the road base serves as a snowmobile route. Firewood: Yes. Toilet: is Further information: Smoke bowl, trash, guestbook.
Kuomiokoski, Ristiina. The closest address is Koskitie 64. There is a large parking lot along Koskitie, where the path is descended from the sign to the lean -to. Coordinates: 61 26.407 N, 27 06.956 e From the parking lot, a very steep downhill towards the lean -to (along the path there are handrails). There are room for a few in the lean -to/soup. Sitting space around the campfire. It's a good idea to bring your own firewood. Further information: In the lean -to wood stove. The lean -to is located right on the shore of the Kuomiojoki River. Good fishing opportunities (take special permits in mind).
Location: From Mikkeli about 10km from Jyväskyläntie, turn right on Hakojoentie and continue for about 1km, then turn right to the forest road after the houses. Continue about 500 m, the lean -to is left. No winter maintenance of the road. Coordinates: 61 46.753 N, 27 07.928 e Parking space: You get a few cars in the yard. Firewood: wooden liter. Toilet: not
Own firewood included.
Plenty of parking around the lean -to. The area has been increased by 2.2 km path.
Coordinates: 6140.695N, 2716.832e Parking space: A large parking lot off Pursialantie off Koda. The home has plenty of seating (25-30 people) and has comprehensive equipment (see web page). The hut is booked on weekdays from 8am to 4pm through the Mikkeli City Workshop Info/Office.
Drive on Anttolantie and turn towards Heinälahti to Tavelinti. Turn left to Aumakiventie, drive about 300m. The parking space is left to the right and the hut is on the left. Coordinates: 6137.266n, 2723.132e Parking space: There is a widening on the roadside with plenty of parking space. Firewood: wooden liter Toilet: is Booking: The hut is locked, but the booking is so far free (2020). The keys are handed over/ contact: Hannu Laamanen tel. +358 50 3513462.
Urpola nature trail is about 1.1 km as a loop through riverside woodland on Urpolanjoki in Mikkeli, South Savo—minutes from the city centre in the Urpola district—within Urpolan luonnonsuojelualue and beside the old mill setting the stream is known for. For the latest opening hours, whether group visits run in May or September, firewood for the campfire circles when staff are on site, and the rule that fires only happen when there is no grass or forest fire warning, City of Mikkeli's Urpolan luontokeskus page is the best first stop(1). Visit Mikkeli gives the same trail basics for visitors, including summer kayak, rowing boat, and SUP loans toward Urpolanlampi when the centre is open(2). Retkipaikka's on-the-ground piece by Luontopolkumies explains how junctions use clear luontopolku boards and small posts topped with an otter motif rather than paint bands, how the path drops to the banks and crosses several footbridges, and how the loop finishes a short walk from the courtyard at Pikku-Urpola(3). The route is a narrow footpath with rooty sections and small height differences, so City of Mikkeli does not recommend bicycles, prams, or rollators(1)(2). Riverside broadleaf growth is lush enough to shelter birds and small mammals; illustrated boards along the stream cover topics such as otter, dipper, brown trout, local geology, and the former mill and fish-farming chapter of the valley(1)(3). Roughly at the start you pass Urpolan luontokeskus nuotiopaikka, where you can borrow pans and sticks during opening hours, and Urpolanlammen uimaranta sits a short detour from the same reach of shore—useful if you want a swim before or after the woodland loop. About 0.7 km into the walk you reach Urpolan luonnonsuojelualueen nuotiopaikka, a second campfire place inside the reserve; stay on marked paths because the brook corridor is protected. On the eastern side the line approaches the Kaihun kierros biking loop: Kaihun vuokrakota and Kaihun kierroksen nuotiopaikka lie near that corridor, and Mikkelipuiston grillipaikka offers another maintained fire spot before you tighten the circle back toward Urpola—handy landmarks if you combine walking with a spin on the bike route or pursue links toward Pursialan ulkokuntoilupaikka Pursiala. In the same Urpola outdoor patch you can extend the day on other maintained lines that share the banks: Urpolan latu for skiing and Urpolan kuntopolku/latu 2,5 km for running share crossings and shore sections with this hike, so marking plans or season maintenance may follow winter sports schedules there while the luontopolku itself remains a year-round footpath(1).
The Hallavuoren polkureitti is about 1.7 km in Anttola, part of Mikkeli in South Savo. For downloadable maps, the polkureitti PDF, and service announcements such as lighting repairs, start with the City of Mikkeli's outdoor recreation routes page(1). Visit Mikkeli rounds up nature routes and trip ideas around Lake Saimaa and the wider region(3). The loop climbs Hallavuori in dry pine forest: short stretches are steep, but the footpath is mostly even underfoot on this round(2). At about 0.6 km along the route you pass Hallavuoren laavu — a good place to pause; the shelter sits near the trailhead parking with table benches and a wood shed as described on the ground(2). The same area links to the Hallavuoren valaistu pururata 3,5km walking circuit, which crosses the hiking loop in several places; that wider track is lit when maintenance allows. Retkipaikka describes yellow paint markers, clear arrows at junctions, and a recommended counter-clockwise circuit, and timed the walk at about three quarters of an hour without a long break(2). From the summit, Lake Saimaa appears between the trees in places rather than as a wide panorama(2). After the hill, the route dips toward Vanhanpappilantie and returns through mixed forest toward the laavu.
For trail maps and the municipal list of polkureitit, start with the City of Mikkeli outdoor trails and lean-tos hub, which links a printable map for this Ristiina circuit(1). The PDF trail map carries the same official line work for on-the-ground navigation(2). Luontoon.fi publishes a winter ski-trail entry for the Linnaniemi area, which helps if you are pairing a visit with the parallel latu network(4). Retkipaikka hosts Luontopolkumies’ shoreline walk-through, with practical notes on signage, pacing, and how the path dips beside tall pururata sections without forcing you onto the groomed tread(3). The route is about 3.6 km on our map along Linnaniemi, a forested peninsula south of Ristiina settlement in Saimaa–Yövesi shoreline scenery. Mikkeli is the municipality today; Etelä-Savo frames the wider lake district context. You begin from the Linnaniementie parking edge shared with the lit exercise tracks: on our map, Linnaniemen valaistu pururata 3,1km for walkers, Linnaniemen kuntorata for runners, and Linnaniemen latu for skiers use the same trailhead band. The hiking line soon leaves the short access road, follows marked wooded shore, and works around several small capes with repeated lake views. About two kilometres along you reach Linnaniemen laavu, the main rest cluster at the southern side of the peninsula—picnic bench, lean-to shelter, and a campfire place for a longer break. From there the circuit threads mixed pine and deciduous forest (rowan and birch show strongly in independent accounts), occasionally brushes the lit oval, and climbs a short rise back toward Linnaniementie before returning to the car park(3). Expect a wide, mostly dry foot and tyre surface with short gravel at the start, a few small bridges, limited rootiness in pine stands, and one modest climb near the northern exit; parties describe overall difficulty as easy to moderate rather than technical(3). Marking is busy: many red-and-white arrows plus yellow paint flashes, so keeping direction is straightforward in leaf-off or summer conditions(2)(3). Dogs are welcomed in material describing the upgraded multi-use route(3). Dedicated YouTube searches on the Finnish trail name did not surface a short overview clip that clearly focuses on this path alone; Retkipaikka’s photo-led account is the strongest audiovisual-style reference(3).
The Kalevankangas nature trail is about 2.9 km as one circuit around Hanhilampi on Kalevankangas in Mikkeli, South Savo—on one of the few remaining continuous esker landscapes from a formerly wider ridge belt in the district. For groomed ski statistics, lit trail networks, contacts for the sports ground master, and how the nature trail sits alongside the wider Kalevankangas trail system, City of Mikkeli's Kalevankangas outdoor trails page is the best first stop(1). Visit Mikkeli summarises the same network for travellers, including the colour-marked multipurpose trails and how the otter-marked nature loop differs from those lines(2). Walk the loop counter-clockwise: white marker posts show an otter symbol plus a black arrow for the recommended direction(1)(3). Twelve illustrated boards introduce ridge nature—plants and animals, Ice Age landforms, groundwater, and local history—while nudging walkers toward biodiversity and conservation; Marjaana Kononen's artwork is meant to invite children and adults to pause at each board(1). After renewal work, much of the line hugs Hanhilampi's shore, with duckboards through wet spots and a wide bridge near the south end of the pond(1). Yle reported the 2019 World Environment Day reopening and those structural updates(4). Early on you often share a broad maintained winter-sports corridor where ski tracks also run in season, then the path narrows along the east shore before a short inland bend, returns to the west shore, and finishes through mixed pine–spruce woodland near stream junctions described on the boards(3). Kalevankangas is busy with locals training year-round: you pass the Kalevankankaan kuntoportaat fitness stairs and several outdoor gym clusters, including Kalevankankaan ulkokuntoilupaikka and Kalevankankaan ulkokuntoilupuisto, and you skirt the larger sports campus where Saimaa Stadiumi sits among the ice halls and field venues along Raviradantie. Those facilities are independent stops—our pages cover gear and opening rules—while this trail stays focused on the pond circuit and its boards. The nature loop connects in spirit with the wider trail menu at Kalevankangas: colour-coded multipurpose routes such as Monikäyttöreitti 2,8 km (Nallepolku), Monikäyttöreitti Otson oikaisu 4,2 km, and Kalevankankaan monikäyttöreitti 6,2 km share the same trailhead district for walking, running, cycling, or snowshoeing when maintained(1)(2). In winter, easy ski-track links head roughly 1.6 km to Kalevankankaan laavu with a campfire place, and options such as Sirkkapuron latu 3,5 km, Kalevankankaan laavun latukierros 4,3 km, Arkiston latu, and Siekkilän yhdyslatu fan out from the same sports area—pick the season map on the city's page before you rely on a given connection(1). Retkipaikka's walk-through by Luontopolkumies adds practical texture—how the wide opening section feels, why waterproof footwear helps on damp esker footing in autumn, road noise along parts of the shore, and a simple bench pause above the pond—worth reading if you want another on-the-ground perspective(3). Mikkeli lies in South Savo on the Saimaa lakeland. Etelä-Savo's esker remnants and lake shores make Kalevankangas a compact outdoor classroom minutes from the city.
Mikkelin Valkea is about 2.2 km as a forest loop around Valkeajärvi on the edge of Mikkeli, in South Savo lake country. The path is easy going and partly duckboarded along the shore, with two campfire places, a lean-to, dry toilets, and parking beside the lake. Walking the path is free; the lake is also a Metsähallitus fishing destination, so anyone who fishes needs the permits and rules described on Eräluvat.fi(1). The City of Mikkeli and Visit Mikkeli publish wider ideas for nature walks, laavut, and day trips across the Mikkeli region and Saimaa if you want to combine this outing with other routes(2)(3). From the ring’s start near Mikkeli Valkea tulentekopaikka, you soon move into shoreline forest. Around the east side, Valkeajärven nuotiopaikka and Mikkelin Valkea käymälä sit close together for a break; Valkeajärvi käymälä and Valkeajärven laavu sit near Mikkelin Valkea paikoitusalue, so you can finish with a fire or snack before returning to the car.
The trail is about 13.7 km through the Hiiden polut network near Neitvuori and Hiidenmaa in Anttola, east of Mikkeli in South Savo. It is the demanding Hiidenkierros segment that runs outside the Neitvuori strict nature reserve, linking forest shores, rocky hills, and lake views toward Lake Saimaa and the Luonteri archipelago. For route names, distances between the five Hiiden trails, Geopark context, and the printable map, start with the City of Mikkeli’s Hiiden polut page(1). Visit Mikkeli expands on Neitvuori as South Savo’s highest viewpoint, the wider 60 km trail family, and practical access notes(2). Metsähallitus describes the Neitvuori–Luonteri protected area and regional recreation context on Luontoon.fi(4). After the first kilometre you reach Hiidenkota with its campfire place—a natural lunch stop and shelter point on this line. Farther south, the Hiidenmaa cluster brings together Hiidenmaa tulentekopaikka, Hiidenmaan talo, and Hiidenmaan sauna at roughly the same distance along the route; the farm area is part of the Saimaa UNESCO Global Geopark story told on Visit Mikkeli(2). Toward the southern end, Neitvuori pysäköintialue sits beside the trail: many walkers finish or start from the signed car park on Neitvuorentie. Neitvuori tulentekopaikka and Neitvuori kuivakäymälä sit at the Neitvuori end of the line—useful for a break before or after the steeper Neitvuori sections if you combine with Hiijje silimukka or Neitvuoren reitti. The Hiiden polut network connects Hiijje silimukka (short geological loop on Neitvuori), Neitvuoren reitti, Viiden vuoren reitti toward Juva, and the long Hiiden polut route on the Juva side. Luontopolkumies walked the Hiidenkierros as a full day hike of about five hours, measured about 13.2 km, and describes steep rock steps, rope-assisted descents, Harvalainen and Riihijärvi shores, Sulama-järvi near Hiidenkota, and Karhunpesänvuori and Tahvontorppa viewpoints—useful terrain detail if you plan pace and footwear(3). The same write-up notes good signing at the trailhead, space at the Neitvuorentie 660 parking area, and optional booking for overnight use of the kota through Hiidenmaan retket(3). Dogs should stay on leash in managed recreation settings in the area(2). There are no drinking-water points along the Hiiden trails; plan water and check fire-weather rules before using marked fireplaces(2).
Häkkilä Trail, Northern Route is a long marked hiking route in Haukivuori, Mikkeli, in the South Savo lake district. For waymarking colours, rest areas, parking options, and how the northern branch fits the wider Häkkilä network, start with the Haukivuori nature tourism pages(1). The City of Mikkeli also lists Häkkilän polku among association-maintained hiking routes in the region(2). Kyyveden Osakaskunta summarises the same trail family, Keronvuori old-growth reserve, and contact details for the route steward(3). The trail is about 36.2 km as one continuous path. Local guides often describe the northern Häkkilä branch alone as roughly 16 km of marked walking between Häkkilänranta, forest lakes, and Vehkamäki, with optional spurs; the full mapped route can feel like a full-day or two-day hike with links to shoreline and lookout points(1). Terrain varies from forest paths and forest roads to lake shores and small hills; the northern route is also described as rideable with a mountain bike or fatbike where the surface allows(1). From the start you soon reach Ruunavuoren näköalapaikka, a viewpoint on the Ruunavuori spur. After Pitkälahti nuotiopaikka and Laihalahti nuotiopaikka you approach Vehkamäen kota, a good longer stop. Vihastenmäen näköalapaikka offers more open views before the route drops toward Keronlahti. There, Keronlahden keittokatos and Keronlahden rantautumispaikka sit on the Naarajoki–Kyyvesi–Puula paddling route, so paddlers can join walkers at the shore. Keronvuoren näköalapaikka and Ohenvuoren näköalapaikka cap the Keronvuori–Kyyvesi shoreline with views over the water. The same Keronvuori area is protected old-growth forest with a group cooking shelter and services described on the lake association pages(3). The circular Pyöräilyreitti Häkkilän ympäri biking route crosses this hiking line around Laihalahti; the long Naarajoki–Kyyvesi–Puula kayaking route shares the Keronlahti landings. South Savo and Mikkeli are known for lake-rich hiking and paddling(2).
For the latest access tips, parking, and who the route suits, start with Visit Mikkeli’s Kaihun kierros page(1). The Kaihu circuit is a short, easy outdoor round through ice-marginal ridges and gentle heath between Mikkelipuisto park and the Urpola countryside centre, with lake views and Saimaa Geopark interpretation along the way(1)(2). On this page the mapped line is about 2.6 km as one continuous path. It is not drawn as a closed loop in our data, but on the ground it behaves as a compact outing you can start from several points: Visit Mikkeli recommends the free car park by Kaihun kota off Pursialankatu 5 and notes boards and short descriptions at Kaihunharju’s south end and along the western shores of Kattilanlahti and Kaihunlahti(1). Walking time is often quoted at about 35 minutes for the roughly 2.5 km circuit in visitor material(1)(2), so a leisurely ride on a city or trekking bike is usually quicker on the paved and wide sections. From the Urpola side, Urpolan luontokeskus nuotiopaikka and Urpolan luonnonsuojelualueen nuotiopaikka lie close to Kaihun kierroksen nuotiopaikka, while Kuntokeskus Liikku Mikkeli and EasyFit Mikkeli Setri are a few hundred metres away along Setrikatu if you arrive by car in that block. Mid-route near Kaihun you pass Kaihun frisbeegolfpuisto, Kaihun beachvolleykenttä, and Kaihun uimaranta, where Marin Matkassa highlights the shallow sandy beach, changing cubicles, beach volleyball, and a small playground for a summer swim break(3). Kaihun vuokrakota offers a bookable shelter for groups; check Saimaa Central Park’s kota page for current fees and reservations(3). The line finishes through Mikkelipuiston grillipaikka, Mikkelipuiston beachvolleykenttä, and Mikkelipuiston ulkosalibandykenttä, with Pursialan ulkokuntoilupaikka Mikkeli and Pursialan ulkokuntoilupaikka Pursiala along Pursialankatu for a strength station after the spin. Walkers often pair this outing with Urpolan luontopolku for a quieter nature line on shared shores, while Urpolan latu and Urpolan kuntopolku/latu 2,5 km share winter and running-loop traffic nearby on other mapped routes(1). Visit Mikkeli mentions partial wheelchair access on the easiest, wide segments from the kota parking but advises skipping the hillier parts of the full circuit for mobility users(1). Polkupyörä Etappi in central Mikkeli rents mountain and trekking bikes by the day if you did not bring your own(4).
Otson oikaisu is the middle-distance option among three year-round, colour-marked winter multipurpose loops on Kalevankangas in Mikkeli: City of Mikkeli and Visit Mikkeli list it at 4.2 km alongside Karhun kiertämä (6.2 km) and the shortest loop published as Nallepolku (2.8 km)(1)(2). The mapped ride for this page is about 4.4 km as one continuous loop through the Kalevankangas sport-and-forest edge. Official copy describes easy, mostly level pine-forest riding with small ups and downs, winding around the Hanhilampi nature side of the hill, passing a lean-to, varied woodland, and small waterlines(2). Summaries aimed at visitors note leashed dogs are allowed, horse riding is not, and surfaces can be slippery or uneven—use care(2). Winter care follows the same pattern as the sister loops: City of Mikkeli prepares the multipurpose corridors with a snowmobile and drag while the wider classic ski network stays a separate system—yield to skiers and avoid damaging tracks when you ride or run near latu corridors(1)(3). Velo Saimaa and the city launched the 2019 naming-and-marking project (club vote on cub-themed names, new field signs, three new wooden bridges)(3). The routes are unlit; bring lights if you start or finish in the dark(3). On the ground the loop threads practical waypoints from our map: you start from the Raviradantie sport block near racecourse pitches and Kalevankankaan school and daycare facilities, pass Kalevankankaan ulkokuntoilupuisto and Kalevankankaan kuntoportaat, cut toward Tuulikin hiekkakenttä, then swing through forest toward Kalevankankaan laavu before returning past Saimaa Stadiumi, ice-hall athletics areas, MAH ry fields and halls, Sport Forum and Padel X Mikkeli, and Kalevankankaan ulkokuntoilupaikka. For a longer pedal the same trailhead network adds Kalevankankaan monikäyttöreitti 6,2 km; for a separate marked nature circuit on foot consider Kalevankangas nature trail around Hanhilampi(1)(2). A Retkipaikka report on Kalevankangas captures wide winter corridors, bridges toward Hanhilampi, and busy intersections where several route types meet—useful context before mixing bikes and skis on the same hill(5). On Velo Saimaa mountain-biking pages you will find regular Tuesday departures from Polkupyörä Etappi and Thursday meetups off Raviradantie if you want company on nearby forest loops(4).
The Cycling route around Häkkilä is a long mountain-bike loop in the Kyyvesi lake countryside of former Haukivuori, now part of Mikkeli in South Savo. The mapped ride is about 41.7 km and forms a circuit. Haukivuori’s nature tourism pages describe it as roughly 42 km, following roads and paths that brush the signed Häkkilä hiking trail network beside Lake Kyyvesi(1). The described start is at the junction of Porsaskoskentie and highway 72(1), in the same general corner of the district as Pitkähiekan uimaranta on Porsaskoskentie 60. Early on the loop you pass Pitkähiekan uimaranta, a lakeshore swimming spot that works well as a quick swim or photo stop. Around eight kilometres into the ride you are near Vehkamäen kota, a wilderness kota on the walking and cycling corridor that links the northern and southern Häkkilä circuits. Near the northeast side of the loop, Laihalahti nuotiopaikka is a sheltered campfire point off Laihalahdentie—handy for a longer break. Several stretches run through forest, gravel roads, and lakeshore shoreline typical of Järvi-Suomi; where the line shares ground with Häkkilä retkipolku branches, expect a mix of blue-signed walking trail sections on the southern shore loop and yellow ribbon or square paint marks on trees along the northern trail as the land manager describes for those hiking lines(1). The route meshes with our mapped hiking corridor Häkkilä Trail, Northern Route, which shares lean-tos and viewpoints such as Keronlahden keittokatos and Keronvuoren näköalapaikka for riders who combine both networks in one visit(1). Visit Mikkeli gathers longer day-ride ideas around Haukivuori and the wider Mikkeli region if you want to extend toward Naarajärvi or add lakeside kilometres after this loop(3). For printed background on how the walking trails and fire places are arranged, Haukivuori still publishes brochure and map links from the same page block(1). Luontopolkumies captured a summer 2019 walk-through of the southern hiking branch with photos of Kapustasalmi parking, marker spacing, and path firmness in dry weather—worth reading even though the trip was on foot(4). Always verify campfire rules and any trail notices with the City of Mikkeli outdoor services pages before you ride; they carry map links and seasonal guidance for the wider municipality(2).
This is the shortest of three year-round, colour-marked winter multipurpose loops on Kalevankangas in Mikkeli—published as Nallepolku alongside longer Otson oikaisu and Karhun kiertämä on City of Mikkeli’s Kalevankangas outdoor pages(1) and on Visit Mikkeli’s trail overview(2). The trail is about 2.1 km for the line used here. On easy pine-forest terrain it is intended for mountain biking, walking, running, and snowshoeing when conditions allow; in winter the city clears snow from these corridors with a snowmobile pulling a small drag, while keeping skiers on the wider ski-track network separate(1)(3). The routes are not lit(3). Dogs may accompany you(3). Velo Saimaa cycling club and Mikkeli Sport Services planned the 2019 naming and marking project: trail names were chosen by club vote on a “bear cub” theme, the city marked the trails and built three new wooden bridges(3). For day-to-day questions the city lists the sports-facilities supervisor at Raviradantie 2(1); Visit Mikkeli also lists tourism contact details for the same area(2). Velo Saimaa’s mountain-biking pages describe an active local scene with regular group rides—Tuesday departures from Polkupyörä Etappi and Thursday meetups near Raviradantie—useful if you want company on nearby forest routes(4). Luontopolkumies’ Retkipaikka walk-through of Kalevankankaan luontopolku captures how busy and well-linked the harju outdoor hub feels, with wide winter ski corridors, foot bridges toward Hanhilampi, and clear signing where several route types meet(5). Along the route you pass practical fitness stops in the Kalevankangas sports campus: early on you are near Kalevankankaan kuntoportaat, then the corridor runs toward Rouhialan koulun pallokenttä and Tuulikin hiekkakenttä before curling past Raviradantie’s Sport Forum cluster—kuntokeskus, hall courts, and Padel X—and finishing near Kalevankankaan koulun liikuntasali, lähiliikuntapaikka, ulkokuntoilupuisto, and tekonurmi. For a longer ride the same hub offers Monikäyttöreitti Otson oikaisu and Kalevankankaan monikäyttöreitti 6,2 km, and for a separate marked nature loop on foot you can add Kalevankankaan luontopolku around Hanhilampi(1)(2). Kalevankankaan laavu on connecting routes sits a bit deeper in the forest network for a fire-pit stop when you combine trails.
Polttopuita voi hakea kesäisin maksutta luontokeskukselta sen aukioloaikojen puitteissa. Muuten tuodaan omat polttopuut mukana. Luontokeskukselta voi kesällä lainata yksikkökajakkeja ja soutuveneitä. Lainaus 18-vuotta täyttäneille tai 15-vuotta täyttäneille vanhemman kirjallisella luvalla. Laitteet palautetaan viimeistään 10 minuuttia ennen sulkemisaikaa.
Nuotiokatos sijaitsee Rantokankaan ulkoilualueella. Mukaan kannattaa varata omat puut. Nuotiokatosta hoitaa Haukivuoren kisailijat ry.
Kannattaa ottaa omat polttopuut mukaan. Rannassa on reilusti parkkitilaa. Keittokatoksessa tilaa n. kahdeksalle henkilölle. Uimaranta ja matonpesupaikka vieressä. Sataman wc on auki rajoitetusti.
Grillipaikka vapaassa käytössä. Voit ostaa polttopuita Mikkelipuistosta tai tuoda omat puut. Halutessasi jonkin määrätyn ajan, kannttaa paikka varata ennakkon.
Seuraa nuotiopaikan opasteita, niin löydät perille. Lyhintä reittiä nuotiopaikalle on parkkipaikalta matkaa noin 300m. Nuotiopaikka sijaitsee Urpolan luontopolun varrella, vanhan myllyn vieressä. Nuotiopaikka on käytettävissä klo 8:00-22:00. Tutustu nuotiopaikalla oleviin toimintaohjeisiin. https://hallinta-mikkeli.kunta-api.fi/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Urpolan-luontokeskus-ja-luontopolku_opaskartta.pdf Koordinaatit: 6140.493N, 2716.222E Parkkitila: jätä autosi Urpolan luontokeskuksen parkkipaikalle. Polttopuut: tuodaan omat puut Wc: ei
Sijainti: Pappilanselkä, Mikkeli. Koordinaatit: 6140.356N, 2718.178E Parkkitila: saareen pääsee veneellä tai jäätä pitkin. Wc: on Varaus: Reijo Tyrväinen 0400 653270 reijo.tyrvainen@mikkelinpursiseura.fi
Ulkokuntosalilaitteet sijaitsevat ihan leikkikentän läheisyydessä.
Suomenniemen koulun piha-alue käytössä kouluajan ulkopuolella.
Tasainen maasto.
Lisätietoa radasta: katso nettisivut kohdasta tiedot. Paikalla myös kuntoportaat (140 askelmaa), WC ja kota. Rata kulkee Rantokankaan kuntoradan ympäristössä.
Tasainen maasto. Draiverien käyttö kielletty.
Paljon korkeuseroja.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Pieni muutaman korin tutustumispaikka frisbeegolfiin.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
78 askelmaa, kokonaispituus 55 m, nousua 8 m.
Noin 30 askelmaa.
140 askelmaa.
Iso allas, lasten allas, putousallas ja lämminvesiallas.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Mikkeli.
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?).
Our roadmap includes:
• Offline Maps: Downloadable trails for when you lose signal in the backwoods.
• Trail Navigation: Follow routes directly from your Phone or Watch.
• Live Safety Sharing: Real-time location sharing so friends and family know you're safe on the trail.