A map of 132 sports and nature sites in Raisio.
Along the gilt
Kullaan Trail is about 12.5 km as a day hike in Raisio, Southwest Finland, linking the Kerttula sports area with forested hills toward Haunisten. For route descriptions, winter access notes, PDF maps, and the downloadable signboard leaflet, start with the City of Raisio outdoor recreation pages(1). The same pages place the trail in the wider Kuhankuonon regional hiking network. Retkiseikkailu lists Kullaanpolku among Raisio’s day hikes with a pointer back to the city’s material(2). You begin near Kerttulan urheilukenttä Kerttula and the surrounding Kerttula campus: ice halls, tennis, disc golf, outdoor gym, fitness stairs, and school fields sit within a few hundred metres of the start—useful if you combine a walk with other activities. The official access description runs from the end of the main sports hall across Kerttulantie onto Vesakkuja and over the bridge across Raumantie(1). After the built-up edge, the path climbs toward Kullaanvuori: about 3.9 km from the start you reach Kullaanvuoren laavu with a campfire place, and near Kullanvuoren näkötorni you can climb the lookout tower for views over the surrounding countryside(1). Farther along the line, the route passes Fit Raisio and Haunisten koirankoulutuskenttä, then Haunisten päivätaukokatos where you connect to the shoreline shelters and disc golf of Haunistenpolku and to Ruskojoen melontareitti for paddlers on the same day out. The trail shares trailheads with Kerttulan luontopolku, Jokiraitti, Kerttulan kuntorata, and Kerttulan hiihtolatu in the sports area, and meets RaisionRaitti toward the city centre network(1). Turun opaskartta offers a zoomable map layer centred on this route for orientation(3).
Timali Trail is about 3.1 km as a coastal nature walk in Raisio, Southwest Finland. It branches from Uikkupolku toward the lush shore of Viheriäinen and also serves people using Hahdenniemi marina; signage starts from the marina area(1). For planning and PDF maps, the City of Raisio publishes route notes and links to Turku region guide maps on its outdoor recreation pages(1), and Luontoon.fi lists the same route for browsing and trip planning(2). Retkipaikka describes shipyard views, the old orchard, gravel-pit woodland, and how marking begins from the marina toward Kalasvahantie(3). The name refers to the bearded tit, a small bird of coastal reed beds that you might spot with patience and binoculars(3). Along the way you pass views of the Perno shipyard and large vessels under construction, shoreline groves and reed beds, an old apple orchard, and wooded former gravel pits where most of the short ups and downs occur(3). The path is mostly wide and easy underfoot, with short asphalt sections where it follows easy movement corridors(3). Marking uses brown directional arrows and blue paint on trees once you are on the Timali section(3). Near the end of the route you reach Hahdenniemen uimaranta and Hahdenniemen talviuintipaikka on Playanpolku—Playa del Raisio’s sandy beach and winter swimming spot with services described on the City of Raisio’s Playa del Raisio page(4). The same city page notes good dog swimming spots along Timali Trail, separate from the swimming beach where dogs are not allowed in the water(4). The nearby Uikkupolku loop includes Uikkupolun lintutorni for birdwatching if you extend your outing along Raisionlahti.
Kerttula Nature Trail is a roughly 3 km marked hike in Raisio, Southwest Finland, between Kerttula sports area and Friisilä. For closures, temporary detours, and PDF maps, start with the City of Raisio’s nature trails listing(1). The route is marked with yellow paint and is usually walked counter-clockwise; the city notes the line can shift when new housing is built, so treat published maps as provisional(1). Independent walkers describe a medium-difficulty mix of spruce–pine forest, rocky outcrops, short duckboard crossings, and meadow edges, with the climb to Kuuanvuori as the scenic heart of the outing(2)(3). Kuuanvuori rises about 52 m above the surroundings. From the top you look across Raisio’s industrial rooftops, Meyer Turku’s cranes, and familiar landmarks; rock faces still show ancient shoreline traces from post-glacial uplift(2)(3). A Crimean War–era optical telegraph station stood here in the 1850s; see history for context. Pikku-Kuuanvuori adds another rocky viewpoint before the trail drops back into mixed woodland where flying squirrels are sometimes reported(2). Near the sports cluster you pass Kerttulan kuntoportaat, Kerttulan ulkokuntosali, Kuntokeidas, Kerttulan DiscGolfPark, Raision jäähalli 1, Raision jäähalli 2, and Kerttulan urheilukenttä Kerttula—handy if you want to combine a short forest loop with exercise facilities. From the same base, Kullaanpolku continues north as a longer day hike on the Kuhankuono hiking network(4) toward Kullanvuoren näkötorni, Kullaanvuoren laavu, and Rusko ski centre. In winter, Kerttulan hiihtolatu shares the neighbourhood; Jokiraitti and RaisionRaitti offer additional walking links from Kerttula toward the river and town centre. Retkipaikka’s autumn walk report gives a vivid on-the-ground feel for Kuuanvuori and the yellow-marked tread(2). Kaija Virtanen’s blog Rinkan kannosta ja muustakin describes the same trail in winter and highlights the many nature-education panels along the route(3). Raisio sits in Southwest Finland’s coastal belt. The trail is a practical city-edge outing when you want rock, forest, and a bit of local history in one short walk.
Vaskipolku is about 4.8 km as one hiking segment in Raisio, Southwest Finland. It is a walking route through the Killi and Nalli river-valley recreation area, introducing Iron Age and late Iron Age archaeological sites (about 500 BCE to 1125/1300 CE)(1). The City of Raisio maintains the trail page with a downloadable PDF map and links to Turku’s guide map for browsing the route on a regional base map(1). Raisio Museum Harkko has produced a free mobile story guide on Tarinasoitin(3), and Know Your Hoods describes the trail as an easy outing in the Ihala neighbourhood, with six Iron Age points of interest called out along the way(2). Underfoot the character is typical urban fringe forest and field paths: easy walking on gravel and dirt, with information boards explaining excavations and sites rather than long wilderness climbs(1)(2). The route is not a loop; it reads as a day walk through local woods and edges of sports areas rather than a remote fell hike. About 1.2 km from the start you pass the Härkähaa cluster, where the route runs close to an outdoor gym, tennis courts, and a school ball field. The same junction links to the on-route running tracks Kuntorata Pansiontie–Härkämäki and Härkämäen kuntorata, the short Härkämäen latu ski trail in winter, and the nearby Kuntorata Härkämäki–Mälikkälä loop. Further along, the path skirts Ihala and Konsa school sports areas with football and beach-volleyball pitches beside the corridor. Near the northern end you pass Kuloisten jalkapallonurmikenttä. If you want a longer walking network in the same municipality, Raision raitti and Jokiraitti meet the river and centre on mixed paths, and the Paavonpolut long-distance hiking route passes close to this corridor for walkers linking toward Turku.
Haunisten Trail is about 2.8 km as one walking segment in the Haunisten allas area in Raisio, Southwest Finland. For current details on the shoreline path, shelters, firewood, toilets, and the disc golf course, the best place to start planning is the City of Raisio outdoor recreation pages(1). The route runs through pine forest beside the former raw-water reservoir: underfoot you get a mix of easy forest paths, gravel, rocky outcrops, and roots typical of a city-edge lake shore(2). Along the way you pass Haunisten esteetön päivätaukokatos very soon after the start, then Haunisten päivätaukokatos farther along the shore, Hauninen DiscGolfPark at Santaojantie 80, and Haunisten koirankoulutuskenttä near Santaojantie 74. The City of Raisio lists two campfire spots with firewood sheds and dry toilets, a dock suited to stand-up paddling, and an 18-hole disc golf course beside the parking area(1). Kotona ja kaupungilla notes an accessible approach of about 400 m from parking to one of the day shelters and describes the area as a relaxed family outing(3). Retkiseikkailu adds that the trail is easy to follow and rewarding for watching waterbirds if you bring binoculars(2). About 2.2 km from the start, the same corridor meets Kullaanpolku, the longer Kuhankuonon day-hike loop toward Kullaanvuoren näkötorni and Kullaanvuoren laavu. Ruskojoen melontareitti lies close by on the water for paddlers who want a linked outing in the same landscape.
For markings, cycling rules, maps, and the Nomadi app, start with the City of Turku maastoreitit pages(1). The Paavon trail network is also documented as geospatial open data via Lounaistieto, with links back to Turku for detail(2). In Raisio, the City of Raisio publishes PDF maps and descriptions for local nature trails such as Uikkupolku and Raision raitti that tie into the same regional outdoor fabric(3). Southwest Finland is a compact region where this network links several municipalities. The hiking line on our map is about 101.6 km as one continuous route from the Raisio end toward Maaria—an unusually long urban and peri-urban connector, not a single-day walk for most people. Near the start, the route passes Uikkupolun lintutorni on Raisionlahti; the separate Uikkupolku loop is a natural short outing if you want birdwatching and shoreline boards before joining the wider network. The orange-arrow RaisionRaitti walking network overlaps the same corridor through central Raisio. Farther along, the line meets many other Turku-region outdoor facilities—sports parks, ski and running loops, and shorter nature trails such as Kaarinan perintömetsän luontopolku around Lauste, and Maarian kivikautinen polku toward the northern end. Vaarniemen-Rauvolahden luontopolku with Vaarniemen näkötorni and Rauvolanlahden lintutorni lies just off the main line in places. The route finishes near Maarian uimaranta. Paavonpolut are marked with blue runner symbols and dots on trees, rocks, lamp posts, and pavement(1). The concept dates from 1999, when orienteer Janne Salmi proposed similar routes after seeing them in Switzerland(1). Mountain biking is allowed under everyman’s rights, but where the route follows a fitness track, cycling is not allowed—follow track and traffic rules on shared paths(1). Terrain varies; some sections can be rough underfoot(1). On a Hepokulta–Kalmasvuori visit, Turkulaiset.fi describes the same blue runner figures on pine trunks and notes how Paavonpolut link neighbourhoods with nearby nature(5). Use Citynomadi and the Nomadi app for live tracking on your phone(1). Open GIS packages for the network are listed on Avoindata.fi(4). Read more on our pages for Uikkupolku, RaisionRaitti, Kaarinan perintömetsän luontopolku, Maarian kivikautinen polku, and Vaarniemen-Rauvolahden luontopolku where those trails connect.
Mälliikälä-Impivaara kuntoradan Y-ristyksessä. Vapaasti käytettävissä. Hiljaisuus klo 22-7.
Vapaassa käytössä. Hiljaisuus klo 22-7. Esteellinen.
Erityisesti ikäihmisille suunniteltu kuntoilupuisto, kuntolaitteita ja levähdyspenkkejä, valaistuja kävelyreittejä.
Vapaasti käytettävissä. Hiljaisuus klo 22-7. Esteellinen.

Paljon korkeuseroja.
Ei käytössä hiihtokaudella. Väylät 7-9 ovat myös multigolfväyliä.

Discover the diverse landscapes and hidden natural gems of Raisio.
Our core dataset is powered by official sources including Metsähallitus and LIPAS (the national database for sports facilities in Finland). We pull the latest GPX routes and location metadata directly from these authorities.
Note: Our database was last synced in 2026. While we strive for accuracy, always consult the official website which we display on each place or route or notices at the trail for safety-critical updates or seasonal closures.
No. Huts.fi is an independent Finnish platform. While we work with official open-data sets from organizations like Metsähallitus, we are a private entity.
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