A map of 3259 sports and nature sites in Southwest Finland.
Wood heated Floating sauna
ÖRÖ Beach sauna is a private sauna on the beach that can be reserved
Mökin omistaa metsästyseura Hangöudds Skärgårdsjaktförening r.f A autiotupa on the island of Morgonland. You can kayak to it. A good blog post of someone kayaking to it: https://anttihanski.blogspot.com/2017/09/morgonlandet.html
This sauna can only be rented by renting the hut.
Saarella on kolme tilaussaunaa. Kahteen pienempään saunaan mahtuu kymmenen henkilöä, kun taas suurimpaan saunaan mahtuu kaksikymmentä saunojaa. Saunat sijaitsevat sataman välittömässä läheisyydessä.
ÖRÖ Hårdasnäs sauna is a private sauna on the beach that can be reserved
This is an electric sauna in Teijo National Park from a private business (Natura Viva). There are many hiking trails, huts and outdoor grills in the area. It is located right on lake Matildanjärvi which makes it nice to go for a swim.

A laavu that is part of Hevonlinna outdoor recreation center. Other things around are a lookout tower, outdoor tickets, picnic benches, outdoor fireplace & grill. Also in the winter there is a maintained ski track

Isoholman Laavu is a hut in Teijon kansallispuisto. It is located on an island in Matildanjärvi. You have to use a kayak, canoe, SUP board or row boat to get out there. You can rent one from Teijo Nature Center which is right by the parking lot / lake. A big thanks to Samoilija Kalevi for letting us use the video & pictures

Roosinniemen laavu is a lean to shelter / hit in Teijo National Park (Teijon kansallispuistoon). It is only about 1 km from the parking lot 🅿️ so it is an an easy hike. A big thanks to Samoilija Kalevi for letting us use the video & photos


Endalin Laavu in Teijon kansallispuisto. Short drive from Turku or Salo. From the parking lot it is only 15-30 minutes walk to this hut. A big thanks to Samoilija Kalevi for letting us use the video.

Teerisaari Laavu. A hut in Teijo National Park (Teijon kansallispuisto) A big thanks to Samoilija Kalevi for letting us use the video & photos.

Meriholma laavu or Isoholman Laavu is a hut on the island of Isoholma in Teijon kansallispuisto. You have to kayak or canoe there. A big thanks to Samoilija Kalevi for letting us use the videos & pictures.
Bergvik Nature Trail is located in the area of



Jeturkasti demanding accessible trail is about a 0.7 km one-way hiking spur in Teijo National Park in Salo, Southwest Finland. The dry pine-heath tread starts at Jeturkastin pysäköintialue, yksi esteetön pysäköintipaikka and leads to Jeturkasti, a raised stone field that geologists read as an Ancylus-age shoreline roughly 9000 years old. Metsähallitus classifies this line as a vaativa esteetön route on Luontoon.fi(1): think steeper short pitches and cross-slopes compared with the lightest accessible trails, so many wheelchair users plan an assistant. Visit Salo frames Teijo as lake, forest, and ironworks-village country with rentals and lodging around Matildanjärvi when you want to extend the day beyond this short visit(3). Retkipaikka published Luontopolkumies’ walk from the same pocket parking: roughly 700 metres of accessible tread to the ancient shore, orange diamond markings on the wider Jeturkasti network, and mostly easy ground before the fascinating boulder scatter at the turnaround(2). Natura Viva at Teijo Nature Centre describes a wheelchair-accessible paved approach from the parking area to the geological sight and notes the wider 4.5 km Jeturkasti trail context(4). At the shore, an accessibility-oriented listing documents a short wooden boardwalk to a compact viewing platform above the stones(5). You return the same way unless you step onto Jeturkasti Ancient Trail for a full loop past Isoholma Laavu, Kariholman ruokailukatos, Teijon luontokeskus, and Matildanjärvi. Dry toilets and the staffed nature-centre services are a couple of kilometres north toward the lake if you need an accessible WC after this spur(4)(5). Dogs must stay leashed in the national park.
For the full Vajosuon hike, overnight laavut, drinking water taps, and the orange-ribbon marking system (blue dots for ring trails, white dots for link trails), start with the Kuhankuono hiking trail network’s Vajosuo hike page(1). Metsähallitus also lists the long Vajosuon mire hike in the Kurjenrahka area on Luontoon.fi(2). The City of Aura summarises how marked routes inside Kurjenrahka National Park connect to the wider Kuhankuono network—together well over 150 km of trails(4). This route is about 2.7 km point-to-point from Töykkälän pysäköintialue in Rusko. Within the first few hundred metres you pass Töykkälän laavu, a typical Kuhankuono lean-to with a fireplace and wood shelter—handy if you want a break before heading on. Near the far end of this segment you meet Vajosuo reitti, the short Vajosuo Mire loop with its towers, rental hut, and campfire places; the same area is the southern gateway described for the roughly 30 km Vajosuon vaellus ring(1)(2). From Töykkälän laavu you can also branch onto Karpalopolku–Töykkälä trail, a longer day walk toward Koivusaaren luontotorni, Kurjenpesä, and other Kurjenrahka services(1). A detailed on-the-ground account of the Töykkälä–Vajosuo leg describes stretches on public road with farmland views, then forest, plus practical notes about duckboards and windthrow after storms—worth reading if you want a feel for conditions on the ground(3). Rusko lies in Varsinais-Suomi north of Turku. The Kuhankuono network runs across several municipalities in Southwest Finland(4).
Vuohensaaren luontopolku is a 1.1 km hiking trail on the island of Vuohensaari, a popular recreation area about 4 km from the center of Salo in Southwest Finland. The island's eastern part falls within the Viurilanlahti Natura 2000 nature reserve. For current trail conditions and a downloadable map, check the Vuohensaaren luontopolku page on Visit Salo(1). The trail takes you through old-growth forests of spruce and pine, along rocky shore cliffs, and past sandy and reed-lined shores. Ancient pine trees with plated bark, mossy boulders, and fallen trunks left in place for forest regeneration give the woods a lived-in atmosphere. Two rare plant species are found on the island — mäkirikko and papelorikko — along with diverse shore flora. Seventeen nature information stations with QR codes tell the story of the island's history, plants, birds, and wildlife; a printed trail brochure is available at the café. At the start of the trail near Satamakatu, Vuohensaaren uimapaikka is the island's main swimming beach, a broad sandy spot with a changing hut. About 360 m into the trail, the Vuohensaaren grillikatos is a covered grill shelter in a wooded shoreline setting. Note that during summer the shelter is reserved for camping guests from 18:00 onwards; it is freely available to all trail users earlier in the day. The trail network has three named sections. Kreivin kierros (0.9 km, marked with orange diamond symbols) is the main clockwise loop through old forest and past the historic Ahtelan torppa farmhouse site. Kipparin polku (0.3 km each way, blue square markers) branches off toward Itäsatama, passing a natural spring and two rocky viewpoints with views toward Salon center — this section includes stairs and is the most physically demanding. Torpparin taival (0.3 km each way, orange square markers) is the gentlest option and the only section suitable for strollers; it reaches the island's southwestern tip with an open view over Halikonlahti. Across the water from the island, the forested cliffs of the Vaisakko nature reserve are visible from shore. The Vaisakon polku and Vaisakko luontopolku offer further hiking nearby — both trails also pass by the Vuohensaaren grillikatos campfire shelter and start from Vaisakon pysäköintialue a short distance away. The island has a summer café-restaurant with a sun terrace (the café doubles as the island's information point where you can pick up trail maps and rent canoes and SUP boards), a camping area with cabins, caravan pitches, and tent spots, a children's playground, an 18-hole minigolf course, a summer theater, and a dance pavilion. Jonna Saari's Retkipaikka article offers a vivid account of the old forest atmosphere and the trail's sandy beaches(2). Luontopolkumies Mika Markkanen's detailed Retkipaikka walkthrough covers each section of the route, notes the roughly 40 metres of elevation gain to the island's high point, and describes the summer café as a great finishing stop(3).
Rauhalinna nature trail is about 1.8 km of marked hiking in Kaarina, Southwest Finland, winding through the wooded manor landscape above Kuusisto strait. The route is not a loop and has several trailheads, so yellow paint marks appear at forest junctions between nine information boards that were renewed in autumn 2019 with illustrations by Sibel Kantola from Mökkigalleria. For closures, etiquette, bus stops, and how the approaches fit together, rely on the City of Kaarina’s Luontopolut guidance(1) and the Visit Kaarina trail page(2). Underfoot it is mostly narrow forest path with roots and small height differences, typical for woodland walking, with roughly 700 m of gentler gravel lane where boards 1–3 stand—fine if you only want the shoreline end without the tighter tread. That easier spine is also catalogued on Luontoon.fi as Rauhalinna easy nature trail(4). Rauhalinna manor is private: the marked route does not cross the manor courtyard and you must not park on the yards(1). Stay on the existing paths to protect the grove soil and ground layer vegetation(1). About 0.6 km along from the start you pass Valkeavuoren hiekkakenttä and Valkeavuoren yläkoulun liikuntasali near Aapiskuja—useful landmarks if you arrive on foot from central Kaarina. About 1.1 km out, Kuusiston sillanpieli kalastuspaikka sits close to Saaristotie by Kuusisto bridge if you want a shoreline pause after the walk. Tammireitit’s route guide highlights the same mix of deciduous forest, open rock, small stream, and seaside atmosphere, and repeats the parking and manor rules clearly(3). From the Kuusisto end you can combine outings with Hovirinta-Piikkiö maisemareitti for a longer shore-and-village circuit toward Piikkiö, step onto Kuusiston-Harvaluodon melontareitti for a paddling line toward Harvaluoto, or continue on Rauhalinna easy nature trail along the gravel lane if you want a shorter outing without the narrow forest sections.
Halikonlahti near Salo in Southwest Finland has been a noted bird area since the 1800s; Viurilanlahti at the head of the bay is a valuable bird habitat, and Salon kaupunki asks visitors to keep that sensitivity in mind along the paths(1). For route widths, markings, bench count, winter maintenance status, bike or horse rules, and the PDF area leaflet, start from the Halikonlahti accessible route page(1). Salon Kohteet highlights migration-season wetland birding, rare waders such as wood sandpiper and spotted redshank on lucky days, and the spring 2025 surfacing refresh on this corridor(2). Retkipaikka’s walk-through by Luontopolkumies adds on-the-ground colour: a roughly triangular circuit beside Satamakatu, reedbed noise when migrants are in, the Timali tower before the accessible lavalle, and a younger tower suited to migration watches—worth a slow lap with binoculars(3). Birdingplaces rounds out habitat context for mud, reed, and basin edges when you are planning what might be on the water(4). The trail is about 2.4 km as we map it. About 1,2 km along you reach Esteetön lintulava, a wheelchair-accessible bird-watching platform with handrails on the steeper approach; the wooden towers and hides elsewhere on the basin ring are not accessible(1)(2). Expect a wide crushed-gravel tread about 1,5–2 m across, wooden guide posts labelled “Esteetön reitti” with the wheelchair symbol, seven rest benches, two accessible picnic table sets, and a bike rack with frame-lock space after the 2025 works(1)(2). Cycling is allowed if you yield to slower users; horseback riding and leading horses are banned to protect the even running surface(1). If you want a longer, non-accessible bird loop around all treatment basins with boards on birds, pair this with Halikonlahden lintupolku from Salon kaupunki descriptions(1). Kayakers on Melontareitti Uskelanjoki–Särkisalo pass the same Esteetön lintulava waypoint on longer paddling days; combine sensibly if you are planning a mixed outing.
The Masuunilampi nature trail is a short marked loop of about 0.8 km in Taalintehdas, Kemiönsaari, in Southwest Finland. For official route facts and updates, start with Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Kemiönsaari lists it among Taalintehtaan trails and links to digital story maps for the same network—handy if you want to read ahead on a phone without installing an app(2). The walk begins from the old ironworks village beside the blast furnace ruins and threads from the cultural yard into lakeshore forest: dark-water pond shores, mires toward Pieni Masuunijärvi, pine on rock, and summer-flowering dry meadows. Sanna-Mari Kunttu’s Retkipaikka feature on Taalintehtaan trails describes boards illustrated by Pive Toivonen and calls out rarities such as blue-flowered mountain avens, dragonflies, cave-dwelling spiders, and dusk wildlife from bats to owls and eagle-owls on autumn evenings(3). The same article notes the route is easy on the legs but not designed for strollers or wheelchairs(3). Where Taalintehtaan’s three colour-coded walks meet near Ruukkimuseo, Luontopolkumies reports that white markings belong to Masuunilammen luontopolku, orange to Pieni Masuunijärven polku, and yellow to Senatsbergetin hyvinvointipolku—worth checking at the first junction so you follow the white line for this loop(4). Large tar birches and nature boards about shoreline plants and threatened species appear in the opening section(4). From the trailhead area you can combine with longer walks: Senatsberget hyvinvointipolku climbs to a lookout tower and lean-to above Stora Masugnsträsket and Pieni Masuuninjärvi offers a short lakeside variant; Ruukinkävely explores the ironworks story as a digital walk. The long-distance Rannikkoreitti cycling route passes close by if you arrive by bike. At the Stora Masugnsträsketin kanoottilaituri you can step down to the water where canoe routes connect to the lake system. Kemiönsaari is an island municipality in the Archipelago Sea. Southwest Finland is known for coastal ironworks villages, wooded shores, and easy day hikes between cultural sites.
The Hovirinta–Piikkiö scenic route is about 13.7 km on our map as a west-to-east corridor through Kaarina in Southwest Finland, from the Hovirinta shore area toward Piikkiö. The City of Kaarina presents it as a roughly 13 km journey you can walk or cycle, mostly on gravel roads, light-traffic paths, and forest trails, and you can shorten it to individual sections or favourite stops(1). Tammireitit describes the overall line west–east and notes that many points sit near public transport lines(2). The route begins at Hovirinnan uimaranta and the busy Hovirinta beach park: in the same cluster you pass Hovirinnan talviuintipaikka, Hovirinnan rantapuiston ulkokuntoilulaitteet, and Hovirinnan rannan koripallokenttä—useful if you want a swim, winter swimming, outdoor training, or a game before setting off. Near Kuusiston silta, Kuusiston sillanpieli kalastuspaikka makes an easy fishing stop beside the channel. Past Rauhalinna, Rauhalinnan luistelukenttä sits close to the line; the Rauhalinna wooded manor landscape hosts Rauhalinnan luontopolku and Rauhalinnan luontopolku helppokulkuinen, which you can combine from the same shore section, with Mökkigalleria and a public pier named on Tammireitit’s description(2). Voivalan uimaranta offers another swim break a few kilometres in. Beyond Karpanmäki woodland fringe the view opens toward fields and Kuusistonlahti. Tuorla is a nationally listed built cultural site: Ammattiopisto Livian liikuntasali marks the vocational campus, while Tuorlan esteetön luontopolku and other Tuorla forest trails—including a campfire—branch from the protected woodland; Tammireitit also points to Space Park Väisälä and the manor setting(2). The main itinerary follows the historic Kuninkaantie and Great Coastal Road toward Raadelman uimapaikka, where Raadelma’s swimming spot and shoreline meadows sit below views toward Kuusisto castle ruins on Tammireitit’s account(2). Around Rungon koulun liikuntasali and Rungon koulun lähiliikuntapaikka the route runs north of the main highway with Piikkiönlahti opening to the side. About 12 km along, Piikkiönlahden lintutorni gives a raised view over the bay. The City of Kaarina describes the accessible Piikkiönlahden bird tower completed in early 2025, with a long wooden ramp, spacious viewing deck, parking at the end of Myrskylinnantie, and rich waterbird, wader, and raptor watching—spring and autumn migration can bring large flocks over Piikkiönlahti within the Kuusistonlahti Natura area(3). Near Puostan kenttä, Tanssistudio Point, and Pontelan punttisali the route reaches Piikkiö’s built-up fringe. From Piikkiö stone church you can continue to Piikkiön Linnavuoren retkeilyreitistö, Harvaluodon pyöräilyreitti, Piikkiö-Toivonlinna pyöräilyreitti, Yhdysreitti Piikkiö-Jaanintie, and onward cycling links toward Lieto and Paimio as the city and Tammireitit outline(1)(2). Kuusiston-Harvaluodon melontareitti overlaps the early shore segment for paddlers who combine beach access with kayaking elsewhere.
Konungskär nature trail is about 0.4 km as a short loop on Konungsskär, a bare rocky islet in Archipelago National Park off the Korpo outer archipelago; Parainen is the municipality on paper, and Southwest Finland is the wider region. You reach the island only by boat, as part of a sheltered natural harbour shared with Birsskär and Västra Tvigölpan. For mooring depths, drinking-water limits, what the open wilderness hut contains, and how the footbridge to Birsskär fits the approach, begin with the Konungsskär chapter in the Archipelago National Park islands article on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Parainen(2) publishes a compact visitor introduction on the Archipelago Trail site, including the same trail length and the reminder that everyman’s rights are narrower inside protected areas. The walk is a vignette, not a day’s hike: you circle the hayfield and knolls while boards explain how people lived off this exposed skerry and how the shoreline has changed. Near the trail you will pass Konungsskärin autiotupa, a four-person open hut with a cast-iron stove, small exhibition, and guidance corner as described on Luontoon.fi(1). Konungsskärin käymälä ja polttopuusuoja sits close by with a dry toilet and firewood storage, and Konungsskärin tulentekopaikka suits a sheltered meal break; Konungskär Telttailualue offers a tent pitch on the turf. Across the pontoon footbridge on Birsskär, Birsskärin tulentekopaikka is the place many boat crews use first, and mooring rings lie along both islands’ shores so you can choose the line that matches your draft—Luontoon.fi(1) still calls Birsskär’s north shore the sweetest tie-up. Kipparilehti’s republished story from Vene magazine walks the same crossing and adds on-the-water context: why sheep still graze the meadow, how much higher the sea sat when the first crofters arrived in the 1820s, and that firewood is supplied at the Birsskär fire ring for responsible use(3). Allow time to read the boards and to look across the reef to neighbouring islets; footing is archipelago rock and short grass rather than a groomed park path, and the harbour can be sociable when summer cruising traffic peaks.
The Piikkiö–Toivonlinna cycling route is about 6.6 km one way as a continuous connector through Kaarina’s Piikkiö district in Southwest Finland toward the Toivonlinna shoreline. Suomi.fi reproduces the City of Kaarina’s description: the first stretch follows a light-traffic path for roughly 2.3 km, then the alignment runs along a quiet rural road verge before opening to gentle rises near the sea; the road is calm overall but the shoulder is narrow or almost absent in places(1). For Turku region guide maps, maintenance responsibilities between municipal streets and ELY-centre highway-side facilities, and the renewed B7 cyclist crossing at Makarlantie by Piikkiön yhtenäiskoulu, see the City of Kaarina cycling pages(2). Tammireitit highlights Arboretum Yltöinen along Toivonlinnantie—check opening times before detouring—and notes an entirely paved ride with about 6.5 km one way in their listing, which rounds slightly shorter than our mapped distance(3). Kotona ja kaupungilla’s visit write-up captures why June rhododendron bloom draws people to the arboretum and reminds readers of weekday gate hours and free entry when the area is open(4). Väylävirasto documents the Turku city-region cycling waymarking programme that renewed signage on radial routes serving Piikkiö by the end of 2023, including main lines from Turku toward the Piikkiö corridor(5). Near the Toivonlinna end, Toivonlinnan frisbeegolfrata sits beside the line where the archipelago-linked Kuusiston-Harvaluodon melontareitti passes very close if you also paddle. Approaching Piikkiö’s core, Piikkiön kuntoportaat marks where Piikkiön Linnavuoren retkeilyreitti shares the same sports cluster; Korvenmäen kuntorata and Korvenmäen valaistu latu branch from that area for a short fitness loop or winter ski session. Pyöräilyn yhdysreitti Pontela joins within about a kilometre if you need a half-kilometre link toward Pontela. Around Piikkiön liikuntahallin kenttä, Piikkiön yhtenäiskoulun lähiliikuntapaikka, Piikkiön frisbeegolfrata, Piikkiön yhtenäiskoulun liikuntasali, and Piikkiön yhtenäiskoulun kenttä cluster together; riders should expect school-adjacent traffic and the raised B7 cyclist crossing described on the city page(2). Pontelan punttisali and Tanssistudio Point sit where built-up Pontela meets the onward links: Pyöräilyn yhdysreitti Piikkiö-Hepojoki and Yhdysreitti Piikkiö-Jaanintie continue the regional network toward Hepojoki, Littoinen, and beyond. For longer outings on separate pages, Harvaluodon pyöräilyreitti and the Hovirinta–Piikkiö scenic route stay within a few hundred metres if you want coastal or mixed trail scenery.
The Piikkiö–Hepojoki cycling link is about 4.3 km on our map as a point-to-point connector in Kaarina’s Piikkiö district in Southwest Finland, heading toward the Hepojoki area and ties into neighbouring municipalities’ cycle networks. The national Suomi.fi service publishes Kaarina’s entry for Hepojoen pyöräilyn yhdysreitti—the same signed link—running through open countryside with waymarking as part of the wider city cycling offer(1). For how this segment fits city-wide cycling, maintenance roles, and links to the Turku region guide map, start from the City of Kaarina cycling pages(2). Tammireitit explains on reitisto.fi how local connectors join numbered regional routes and longer touring itineraries across Kaarina, Lieto, Paimio, and Sauvo—useful if you are stringing day rides together(3). Väylävirasto documents the Turku city-region cycling waymarking programme that renewed signage on radial and ring routes through 2023, including main lines that serve Piikkiö(4). Near the western end, the line meets Yhdysreitti Piikkiö-Jaanintie and Piikkiö-Toivonlinna pyöräilyreitti almost on top of one another; Piikkiön frisbeegolfrata sits beside that junction if you want a quick disc-golf stop. As you pass Piikkiön yhtenäiskoulun kenttä, Piikkiön yhtenäiskoulun lähiliikuntapaikka, and Piikkiön yhtenäiskoulun liikuntasali, the City of Kaarina lists a raised cyclist crossing (B7 pattern) at Makarlantie by Piikkiön yhtenäiskoulu—worth slowing for in school traffic(2). Along Hadvalantie, Tanssistudio Point marks the built-up fringe before the trace opens toward the Hepojoki tie-in. About 4.3 km from the start on our line, the geometry joins Yhdysreitti Lieto-Hepojoki-Paimio for onward cycling toward Lieto and Paimio. Pyöräilyn yhdysreitti Pontela branches very close to the start if you need a short local loop around Pontela, and Harvaluodon pyöräilyreitti sits a few hundred metres away for a coastal detour; Hovirinta–Piikkiö scenic route crosses nearby if you prefer a longer mixed hiking-and-biking shore-to-village itinerary.
For how winter routes are packed, where grooming runs, and shared-use rules, start with the City of Paimio’s winter cycling route pages(1). In snow, Paimio maintains one connected winter cycling network that links the groomed portions of Paimion polku, the Helmi MTB trails, and Lampipolku(1). On Paimion polku itself, volunteers compact snow with a Snow Dog pulling a tamper so fatbikes, narrower mountain bikes, and walkers can share the same corridor(1). The winter line you see here is about 9.5 km as one continuous path. It is not a loop. Grooming on Paimion polku covers the ground between the sports park (Urheilupuisto) and highway 110, plus the western leg from 110 toward Hiekkahelmi(1). The stretch south of Hiekkahelmi stays ungroomed in winter because it is too difficult to maintain(1). That lines up with summer guidance that the southernmost parts of the full Paimion polku are the most demanding on a bike(2). Hiekkahelmi works well as a social trailhead: parking, a dry toilet, and a campfire spot sit at Hiekkahelmentie 41, with wayfinding from the southeast corner of the car park(1). About one kilometre into riding from the western approach you reach Hiekkahelmi’s pond and the beachvolley pitch beside it—natural breaks on a short fatbike lap. Urheilupuisto is the practical choice if you want to park closer to town and join the same network(1). From Hiekkahelmi you can also peel onto Lampipolku or the Helmi MTB loops when conditions allow(1)(3). Trail etiquette here is explicit: walkers yield to cyclists, cyclists signal when overtaking, dogs stay leashed, and studded tyres or boot studs help on ice(1). Skip the routes during thaw if you do not want to leave deep ruts that freeze into bumps(1). Independent visitors who met their group at Hiekkahelmi describe wintry forest laps there with both hikers and mountain bikers sharing chilly, sometimes slick trails, which matches how busy the car park can feel on a weekend(5). If you need a fat tyre bike, Villa Järvelä outside central Turku rents fatbike-style e-bikes year-round with helmets included—useful before you drive the last half hour to Paimio(6). The wider summer Paimion polku is 18.7 km end to end with blue–white–green blazes, stairs, bridges, and duckboards(2). Electric-assist bikes are not permitted south of the Hiekkahelm area on that land-use corridor(2)(3); keep the city’s summer MTB pages in mind if you link groomed snow onto signed trail sections.
Kuuden kunnanosan kierros is a long day loop for cyclists exploring six municipal districts of Lieto while starting from the Littoisten Järvelä area in Kaarina, within easy reach of Turku in Southwest Finland. On our map the ride is about 61.3 km as one continuous line. Tammireitit publishes the route as a 61 km circular tour with a full turn-by-turn road list from the Littoinen–Auranlaakso corner through river farmland, village roads, and forest links(1). The circuit is part of the wider Tammireitit network shared by Kaarina, Lieto, Paimio, and Sauvo, with hundreds of kilometres of linked cycling, walking, and paddling routes and maps on the regional hub(1)(2)(3). The Municipality of Paimio notes that dedicated Tammireitit cycling signage was installed across the four municipalities during 2024 and formally taken into use, complementing work with Varsinais-Suomen ELY Centre and Valonia(4). Official copy stresses a mix of multi-use paths and very quiet local roads, deliberate underpass and bridge crossings so you are not asked to dash across high-speed highway carriageways, and several unpaved stretches where wider tyres feel more comfortable(1). Historic Häme Ox Road and Varkaantie corridors appear along the official itinerary, and marketing language highlights the Aura River national landscape, open countryside, and layers of cultural history(1)(2). Tammireitit asks riders to keep distance from farmyards on private lanes and carry litter out, because goodwill with landowners keeps long connectors open(1). Along the mapped trace you pass ordinary village sports sites and a few stronger outdoor anchors worth knowing about in advance. Near the start, Auranlaakso school and Littoinen clusters sit beside the thin nature link Auranlaakson luontopolku. Around the mid-route Nautela gap you approach Nautelan lintutorni beside kayaking portage threads and short hiking loops such as Ankka–Nautela luontopolku and Nautelankoski nature-reserve footpaths; the lit fitness loop beside Lieto railway station crosses the same river neighbourhood. Further south the trace drops toward Saukonoja, where a village laavu and fitness stairs lie just off the lane before the line bends back toward Kaarina past Capritalli riding fields. Optional add-ons on neighbouring traces include Kultanummen kuntopolku at Littoinen beach, Parmaharjun luontopolut and Liedon Vanhalinnan kulttuuri- ja luontopolut near Vanhalinna history country, and Aurajoen melontareitti for paddlers who want a parallel water story. Allow a full day, carry water and basic tools, and double-check any closure or detour notices on Lieto’s cycling pages or Kaarina’s cycling pages before you leave; those cities carry the operational outdoor updates for their territories(2)(3). For visitors without a car-full of bikes, Turku’s city bike and rental networks are the practical place to source a gravel-capable or trekking bike before pedalling out to the eastern suburbs(5)(6).
Högland tulentekopaikka
Sandvik tulentekopaikka
Gritbird- ja Gritree-laitteet.
Nunnavuoren kuntoradalla, Signalistinkadun koira-aitauksen vieressä. Vapaassa käytössä. Hiljaisuus klo 22-7.
Valpperin kehittämishankkeen osaksi 2023 hankitut Gympark -ulkoliikuntalaitteet . Laitteita viisi kolmen laitteen modulia eli yhteensä 15 laitetta.
Koivulan ulkoilureitillä. Vapaassa käytössä. Hiljaisuus klo 22-7.

Tasainen maasto. Väylien pituudet ovat 40-70 m. Akustinpuisto is a 6 hole frisbee golf course in Somero.

Tasainen maasto.

Paljon korkeuseroja.

Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Paljon korkeuseroja. Hiihtokaudella rata suljettu.



108 porrasta.
42 porrasta.
Gritbird- ja Gritree-laitteet. Kuntoportaissa 100 askelmaa.
Portaissa on 114 askelmaa
38 metriä pitkät kuntoportaat, 62 askelmaa
71 askelmaa.
Kahdet kuntoportaat Hevonlinnan ulkoilukeskuksella, Frisbeegolf radalla väylän 16 välittömässä läheisyydessä.
Lastenallas, terapia-allas, poreallas, kylmäallas sekä kaksi 25 m rataa kuntouimareille. Ulkoallasalueella 10,8 m allas, lastenallas ja kaksi poreallasta.
Poreallas, virkistysallas, roomalainen allas, terapia-allas ja ulkoallas. OLOFitness-kuntosali.
Uima-allas, liikunta-allas, roomalainen allas, mahdollisuus uintiin meressä vuoden ympäri. Kuntosali.
Discover the diverse landscapes of Southwest Finland. 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.
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.