A map of 215 sports and nature sites in Kemiönsaari.
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
ÖRÖ Hårdasnäs sauna is a private sauna on the beach that can be reserved
Sundsvedjan laavua
It is recommended that you bring your own firewood.
Mökin omistaa metsästyseura Hangöudds Skärgårdsjaktförening r.f. A cabin on the island of Morgonland.
A day -to -day campfire canopy, maintained by the Västanfjärd Village Association.
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.
Holma Linsno nature trail is about 1.3 km on Holma island in Kemiönsaari, Southwest Finland, within Archipelago Sea National Park. It is the shortest of the marked Holma walks and focuses on coastal meadows and traditional pasture landscapes. For rules, conditions, and trail-specific detail, start from Metsähallitus on Luontoon.fi(1); Visit Kemiönsaari’s nature trails and outdoor routes page rounds out planning elsewhere in the municipality(2). Luontoon.fi describes the path as easy walking, marked with small stone cairns and signs, with boards that explain meadow management and the plants and animals of these open habitats(1). A roughly 100-metre marked side path climbs to a high cliff with views over Gullkrona bay, and the route is noted for a distinctive oak enclosure within the national park(1). In summer you may meet grazing sheep and Finnish cattle on the pastures(1). The outing pairs naturally with the longer Holma Gölpo nature trail and Holma nature trails on the same island after the ferry from Kasnäs(1). Expect ticks in warm weather, keep dogs leashed throughout the national park, and watch for slick rock when it is wet(1). Retkiseikkailu lists Holma’s short nature walks among other Kemiönsaari highlights if you are sketching a multi-stop archipelago day(4).
The Six-Inch Story is a short, roughly 1.2 km marked loop on Örö fortress island in Kemiönsaari, Southwest Finland. It sits in Saaristomeri National Park and threads the south-end military heritage cluster around the historic six-inch battery barracks, the bunker bivouac building and the sandy Solkuro shoreline—an easy orientation walk before you commit to the longer blue-marked six-inch circuit. Plan boat timetables, park rules and how the island presents its marked routes using Luontoon.fi(1) together with Visit ÖRÖ(2); their tables describe the full sininen 6″-kierros toward the outer battery positions, while this loop keeps the same coastal artillery story on a smaller footprint. Starting from the six-inch barracks service edge you are never far from Solkuro, a natural swim-and-pause beach on the south coast. The reservable tent pitch Örön 6" kasarmialueen varaustelttailupaikka" sits within the same fenced heritage yard as the loop, and dry toilets are spaced along the barracks paths and near the old ordnance store area so you can move lightly for under an hour. Örön Käymälä Bunkkerimajoitus marks the bunker-side facilities that supported overnighting soldiers when the fortress was active. If you still have legs after the story loop, step onto Kuuden Tuuman Kierros for the full south peninsula circuit with its suspension bridge and open sea views, or note that Rannikkoreitti touches the same service roads when you explore Örö by bike. Independent hikers looking for field photos of the wider blue-marked loop—Solkuro, Lyhyt Ikävä and Pitkä Ikävä cobbles, south battery emplacements—will find Retkipaikka's Luontopolkumies story useful ground-level colour(4).
The Trail to Jarlsgård stone labyrinth is about 2.1 km as a loop through Västanfjärd on Kemiönsaari, in Southwest Finland. Visit Kemiönsaari lists it alongside the nearby Lammala nature trail as a separate roughly 2 km marked route toward the stone labyrinth (jatulintarha) at Jarlsgård(1). For closures and the island-wide activity overview, their nature trails and outdoor recreation hub is the right place to start(1). From the trailhead end of the loop you are a few steps from Västanfjärd DiscGolfPark. Round the hill you pass the Vårdkasen sports cluster—Vårdkasenin sali, Vårdkasenin jalkapallokenttä, and Vårdkasenin tenniskentät on Seuratalontie—so the walk mixes woodland and quiet village recreation edges. The path reaches Jarlsgårdin jatulintarha on a rocky hilltop where stone lanes form maze-like figures: a large, fairly intact ring with clear walking paths, a smaller scattered ring beside it, and north of the main pair a possible third ring that heritage work alternatively interprets as cairn remains—as reproduced in the Finnish Heritage Agency summary on kotimaassa.fi(2). The large figure’s path can leave the centre without walking every outer ring, which reads differently from many classic Finnish coastal labyrinths(2). Retkipaikka’s nearby Lammala walk explains how many Rannikkoreitti cyclists pause in this parish; it points hikers who want a second loop toward the separate nature route leaving Västanfjärd’s old church for Jarlsgårdin jatulintarha—useful context if you are stitching walks together in the village(3). The same short walk lines up with the long coastal bike corridor used by Rannikkoreitti and meets the marketed Västanfjärd cycling circuit locally—easy to combine modes if you already have bikes with you. Move carefully on rock and roots after rain, and keep to the marked line so the fragile stone settings stay intact.
Holma nature trails are about 3.1 km of signed hiking on Holma, a village island at the outer end of Kemiönsaari in Southwest Finland, where everyday island life sits beside Saaristomeri National Park. Metsähallitus publishes the Holma Linsno luontopolku sheet on Luontoon.fi with maps and route facts for one of the two marked branches(1). Visit Kemiönsaari gathers the municipality’s nature trails and points day trippers to the activity map for the latest combinations of ferry, road and trail access(2). Retkiseikkailu’s Kemiönsaari trail index lists Holman luontopolut as a short loop of about 600 m and a longer option of about 2 km—useful labels when you plan how much of the linked path to walk in one go(3). On our map the same hiking area is drawn as one continuous line of about 3.1 km, joining the Holma Linsno luontopolku and Holma Gölpo luontopolku segments that share the island’s village and shoreline setting. The Luontoon.fi destination introduction to Saaristomeri National Park explains wider park rules, services and the coastal archipelago context around islands such as Holma(4). Yle’s Elävä arkisto article on the documentary Marian saari (1996) reminds readers that Holma is a lived-in fishing and farming community on the edge of the national park, not an uninhabited wilderness; respect private yards, livestock and small-boat traffic as you move between the harbour area and forested shores(5). If you are travelling by kayak, the long Kansallispuistokierros route threads through the same sea area with many dedicated stops elsewhere—pairing a short walk on Holma with a paddling leg is a common way to explore the park. Together Holma Linsno luontopolku and Holma Gölpo luontopolku make a compact introduction to wooded shoreline, village paths and open views over inner archipelago waters. Allow time to read the on-trail boards and to watch for seasonal boat movements near the harbour.
For trail listings and lengths in the archipelago, start with Visit Kimitoön’s nature trails and outdoor recreation page(1). The Municipality of Kemiönsaari describes Amospuisto at Edvin Widen tie as an 11-hectare sports park with parking along Edvin Widen tie and near the school outside school hours, plus bus connections on the Turku–Kemiönsaari line stopping at Amospuisto(2). The trail is about 4.9 km as one walking line through Norrskogen near central Kimito. Brochures and tourism pages often round the main circuit to about 6 km with a separate 0.5 km accessible branch(1)(3). It begins from Amospuisto, passes outdoor exercise infrastructure including Kemiönsaaren Kuntoportaat where the long-distance Rannikkoreitti cycling route also runs, then continues into mixed conifer forest and more open rocky pine sections. The route is marked with orange paint(3). Along the way, fitness trail boards in Finnish and Swedish explain body-weight exercises; QR codes link to short demonstration videos, and a mat helps for ground exercises(3). There are table–bench rest spots and Norrskogenin laavu with a fire ring—bring your own firewood; gathering wood in the forest is not allowed(3). Near the far end lies Kemiön koirapuisto. In winter, the Långdalenin peltolatu ski track meets the same broad area. The short mapped branch Kemiön ulkoilureitti, esteetön reitti covers the accessible approach and the same lean-to and dog-park corner as a separate line. A demanding accessible route about 0.5 km leads to the lean-to from the Norrbackantie and Mansikkapolku junction (parking at Norrbackantie 48); it is not the same start as the full loop and can suit terrain-capable strollers and assisted wheelchair use with steep stone sections on the final climb(3). Retkipaikka’s article by Sanna-Mari Kunttu adds practical detail on markings, surfaces, and the lean-to(3). Kemiönsaari lies in Southwest Finland. The main island mixes village streets, recreation fields, and Norrskogen forest.
Holma Gölpo nature trail is about 1.8 km across the national-park side of Holma island in Kemiönsaari, Southwest Finland, inside Archipelago Sea National Park. Metsähallitus describes the marked trail on Luontoon.fi(1); for wider planning around island trails and outdoor ideas in the municipality, Visit Kemiönsaari’s nature trails and outdoor routes page is a useful companion(2). The path is marked with small stone cairns and signs and is mostly easy walking, but expect short steep climbs, two fence crossings that need care, and slick rock when it is wet, so Luontoon.fi does not recommend it for visitors in poor physical condition(1). Typical descriptions suggest allowing roughly two hours at an easy pace for the fuller island loop that many walkers follow, which matches how much time people spend on the viewpoints and meadow sections(1). Along the way you pass archipelago forest, coastal meadows, and glacial giant’s kettles, and there is a side spur to a stone maze. The high cliff Vaktanberget looks out over Gullkrona bay and is the trail’s main lookout(1). Tick protection is sensible in summer and dogs must stay leashed inside the national park(1). On the same island, Holma Linsno luontopolku and Holma nature trails offer shorter meadow-focused walks if you want to combine outings after the ferry from Kasnäs(1). The long sea kayaking route Kansallispuistokierros also runs through the same park on the water if you are pairing a paddling trip with a shore day.
Högland tulentekopaikka
Sandvik tulentekopaikka
Yxskär tulentekopaikka
Sandönin tulipaikka
18-väyläinen puisto- ja metsärata.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja. Laajennettu 2018.
Jonkin verran korkeuseroja.
Lastenallas, terapia-allas, poreallas, kylmäallas sekä kaksi 25 m rataa kuntouimareille. Ulkoallasalueella 10,8 m allas, lastenallas ja kaksi poreallasta.
Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Kemiönsaari.
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?).
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