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Yläne

Finland · Europe

Yläne, Finland
Yläne, Finland. Photo via Wikimedia Commons.

About Yläne

Pöytyä is a mostly rural municipality in the inland of Finland Proper, including also the former municipalities of Karinainen and Yläne. This article additionally covers the neighbouring municipality of Aura.

There are cultural landscapes around Aurajoki, with churches, old mills, and a restored wolf pit, valuable bogs in a few locations, lakes and small rivers. The current and former municipal centres are small towns with 1,000–3,000 inhabitants.

Yläne travel guide

Understand

Pöytyä has a population of 8,000 people on 774 km². The current centre is Kyrö (pop. 2,000), former centre of Karinainen as a result of the now defunct railway station. The parish village of Karinainen is 3.5 km away. Other centres are Riihikoski (pop. 1,500) near the former parish village of Pöytyä, and Yläne (pop. 1,000), the former parish village of the namesake parish. Yläne is in the north-west, Karinainen in the south-east and the former Pöytyä in between. Aura in the south has 4,000 inhabitants, 2,700 of whom live by the former station, 5 km north of the much smaller parish village. In the north Pöytyä borders the large lake Pyhäjärvi (not to be confused with its many namesakes), Eura and Säkylä of the region Satakunta, and Oripää; in the north-west Mynämäki (including Karjala); in the south Aura, Lieto (including Tarvasjoki) and Marttila; and in the east Loimaa (including Mellilä). Aura in turn lies between Paattinen in the Turku countryside to the west, Pöytyä to the north and Lieto to the south, with Lieto station just across the border. The area is mostly agricultural, especially around Aurajoki, with woods farther away and at bogs and hills not suitable for growing crops. Important wetlands include Kontolanrahka, the ones of Vaskijärvi nature reserve and some bogs of Kurjenrahka National Park. Some industry developed early on in what now is Aura and grew quickly with the railroad. As the station settlement grew, the Prunkkala chapel of Lieto and the station settlement, part of Pöytyä, became an independent parish. In 1917 the worldly administration followed suit as the municipality Aura, named after the river and the station (which became defunct in 1999 and demolished in 2002). In addition to the southern end of Pyhäjärvi, Pöytyä includes the lakes Elijärvi, Vaskijärvi, most of Savojärvi, and some smaller lakes. The river Aurajoki has its sources just north-east of the municipal borders and its river valley forms the central part of Aura and former Pöyt

Getting there

Highway 9 (E63; Valtatie) from Turku to Loimaa, Humppila and Tampere passes through Aura and Karinainen, leading by Kyrö. Road 41 (Kantatie) leads from Aura (the junction is known as Auranportti) via Riihikoski to Oripää, Huittinen and Tampere. The older road toward Tampere (road 222) is known as Vanha Tampereentie in Turku but changes names to Turuntie as it leads via Aura parish village to the station settlement. Turuntie in Pöytyä (road 2255) more or less connects to this road, continuing through Riihikoski to Oripää. These roads are a more scenic alternative to the highways, as they lead through the cultural landscapes by Aurajoki. Regional road 204 (Säkyläntie, Turunväylä) leads from Lieto by the national park and Yläne to Säkylä. Regional road 210 leads from Loimaa via Oripää to Yläne and onwards to Lappi at Highway 12 from Rauma. Regional road 224 leads from Salo to Aura. Road 2020 leads from Mynämäki to Yläne. Road 2042 leads to Aura from Saksala (Rantapiha) and Tortinmäki by Kurjenrahka National Park. The trains between Turku and Tampere, with nearly hourly services in daytime, stop in Loimaa, which may be more convenient than Turku in some situations. The stations of Kyrö, Aura and Lieto are closed. The express coaches on roads 9, 41 and 204 stop at junctions to the centres and some other key stops. There are also regular services. See Matkahuolto. By bike, cycleways from Turku along Vanha Tampereentie (road 222) end at Lieto station. Continuing by that road, shoulders are narrow but speeds and traffic moderate. The main roads (at least E63 and road 204) cannot be recommended for biking. There is a terrain biking route from Turku to the national park. Bikes can be taken on most coaches, except the Onnibus Mega, for a fee varying by company and distance, usually about €6.

Getting around

By car

By bus The coaches are the main public transport in the area.

By bicycle There are few cycleways. The thoroughfares are mostly unusable (high speeds, narrow shoulders), but there are smaller roads between most places (as alternatives or the only ones; sometimes winding gravel roads, although usable with normal bikes). Traffic on smaller roads may be fast for the road, keep to the right. You should probably check that a route is viable before trying it with children.

See

The main attraction in the area is Kurjenrahka National Park. It is served by the Luontokapinetti in Yläne centre, Kurjenpesä in the park and Rantapiha by Savojärvi (in Nousiainen). Vaskijärvi Nature Reserve lies on the trail from Elijärvi to the park. There is also a range of other natural and cultural sights, including rapids with old mills, churches and a restored wolf pit.

1 Aura Church, Turuntie 437 (Prunkkala/Kirkonkulma, Aura). Church from 1804. 2 Koskipirtti, Riihikoskentie 36 (Kuuskoski village, Aura), ☏ +358 40-720-9101, [email protected]. Groups by agreement. Interiors and items from early 20th century in a wooden mansion from the 1860s. 3 Kurjenpesä, Koivukuja 12 (800 m by a gravel road from the Kuhankuono bus stop on Turunväylä), ☏ +358 20-639-4620, [email protected]. 08:00–20:00 daily; Kurkela 09:00–18:00. Unmanned visitor centre of the national park. Nice small exhibition, picnic tables, cooking shelter, dry toilet. Wheelchair accessible (assistance may be required), including the trail to Kuhankuono by the bog Kurjenrahka. A cottage, Kurkela, can be rented for daytime use, with indoor cooking facilities, electricity and hot running water. Free; Kurkela €30/4 hr, €50/day. 4 Luontokapinetti, Hovilanmäentie 2 (Yläne centre), ☏ +358 40-737-3243, +358 40-721-9689, [email protected]. Nature-related exhibitions and activities. €6/5/4. 5 Raatikainen Wolf Pit, Turuntie 1547 (at a hillside across Aurajoki from Turuntie (signage), 4 km north of the Pöytyä parish village). Jun–Aug 24 hr daily. Wolf pit from the late 19th century, restored in the 1960s. One of the sights along the cultural history trail; Free. 6 Reppuniemi open air museum (Reppuniemi ulkomueoalue), Turuntie 1047 (1 km south of Pöytyä church), ☏ +358 500-525-984. By agreement. (updated Feb 2017)

Itineraries Saint Henry's Way. A modern pilgrimage trail with medieval heritage passing through the area. St. Henry is regarded the national saint of Finland. Aurajoentie. Sights along

Do

Swim by the shores of Salojärvi, Elijärvi, Pyhäjärvi or some other lake. 1 Rantapiha, Savojärventie 102 (Saksala of Nousiainen, at the western shore of Savojärvi), ☏ +358 500-935-960 (Saksalan pienviljelijäyhdistys). Sauna 11:00–20:00 during school holidays; beach 24 hr daily. Beach, sauna, barbecuing, small scale camping, kiosk. Rowing boats for hire. Sauna for rent off season. Free. Social dancing; Aura and Yläne have two of the most popular dance venues in all the region, with dances in winter and summer respectively. 2 Auran nuortentalo, Kirkkotie 254 (by Highway 9, at the junction towards the parish village of Aura), ☏ +358 40-514-2468, [email protected]. Oct–Apr: Sa 19:

Overview adapted from Wikipedia, travel guide fromWikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。Photography via Wikimedia Commons.

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