The West Coast of Finland is a geographically flat region bordering the Gulf of Bothnia. Being the westernmost part of Finland, this is where western influences such as Christianity first arrived in Finland. As a result of this, here you can find some of Finland's oldest cities and towns as well as half of the country's Swedish-speaking minority. This article comprises the pre-1997 Turku and Pori and Vaasa provinces.
Regions
Central Ostrobothnia Central Ostrobothnia is both geographically and population-wise relatively small. Most things of interest can be found in the region's largest city Kokkola. The town Kaustinen hosts a huge yearly folk music festival. |
Ostrobothnia The region of Ostrobothnia has a large Swedish-speaking population and the Kvarken Archipelago, which is slowly rising up from the sea due to post-glacial rebound. |
Southern Ostrobothnia This remarkably flat region is home to several music related events and the country's most famous hard alcohol brand, Koskenkorva. |
Satakunta This region hosts two UNESCO World Heritage Sites; Rauma's old town and the Sammallahti bronze age burial site. The sand beaches of Yyteri are also quite popular in the summer. |
Finland Proper The southwesternmost part of Finland is called Finland Proper for historical reasons. The largest city here, Turku, is the oldest city of Finland and hosts a castle and a cathedral that are amongst the oldest in the country. The archipelago that reaches all the way to the Åland islands is another popular destination in the region and especially beautiful in the summer. |
Towns and cities
Finnish name/Swedish name, name of majority language linked:
- 1 Kokkola/Karleby
- 2 Kristiinankaupunki/Kristinestad
- 3 Närpiö/Närpes – tomato capital of Finland with their own, very special Swedish dialect
- 4 Pietarsaari/Jakobstad
- 5 Pori/Björneborg
- 6 Rauma/Raumo – beautifully preserved old town which is on the UNESCO world heritage list
- 7 Seinäjoki
- 8 Turku/Åbo – the former capital of Finland
- 9 Vaasa/Vasa
Other destinations
National parks
- 1 Archipelago National Park – see Archipelago Sea
- 2 Bothnian Sea National Park – lighthouses, seals and waterfowl, accessible with tour boat, a few spots also by road
- 3 Kurjenrahka National Park – open bogs, small lakes, and old growth forest. Accessible with public transportation from Turku
- 4 Teijo National Park
- 5 Puurijärvi-Isosuo National Park
- 6 Lauhanvuori National Park – highest point of Western Finland
- 7 Kauhaneva-Pohjankangas National Park
- 8 Salamajärvi National Park
UNESCO World Heritage Sites
- 9 Kvarken Archipelago – post-glacial bouncing coast with De Geer moraines
- 10 Rauma Old Town – famous wooden old town
- 11 Sammallähdenmäki – bronze age burial sites
Other
- 12 Ähtäri Zoo – zoo with giant pandas!
- 13 Olkiluoto Nuclear Power Plant visitor center – everything you wanted to know about nuclear power
- 14 Lake Lappajärvi – the biggest meteor crater in Finland and one of the largest ones in Europe as well
- 15 Söderfjärden – a vast meteor crater not filled with water but crops fields. Astronomical exhibition. Important bird watching site.
- 16 Tuuri Village Store – a shamelessly overheating hypermarket complex in a tiny village. Weird but very popular attraction.
Understand
The West Coast is a region with long-standing agricultural traditions. The southwest is the "breadbasket of Finland". Vast expanses of flat land with cultivated fields characterize the Ostrobothnian (Finnish: Pohjanmaa, Swedish: Österbotten) regions, in obvious contrast to the heavily forested inland Finland. These open arable landscapes are known as lakeus in Finnish. Coastal traditions, fishing and boating are also a part of the tourism scene in the region. As an exception, the hinterlands of Satakunta between Pori and Tampere are densely forested, sparsely populated and can be relatively hard to reach.
In Finnish ethnography, the west coast does not form a unified entity, but is clearly divided between Ostrobothnia and the Southwest, which have notably different dialects. Furthermore, in the inland, there is a small region of Savo dialect speakers (so called savolaiskiila) in southeastern Ostrobothnia and Häme dialect speakers in eastern Satakunta. Finnish Ostrobothnian dialects are fairly recognizable and people tend to have very strong local identity.
Owing to old traditions of agricultural land ownership, both cultures place a high value on honesty, the Protestant work ethic, and property ownership. Distinctively, as compared to the rest of Finland, there are many small and medium-sized enterprises that result in a high level of economic development.
Religious awakening or revival movements with a lay preacher tradition – such as Laestadianism, Evangelicalism, and Awakening – are particularly popular in the Ostrobothnia region. Certain parts of Ostrobothnia are even sometimes referred to as a Bible Belt of Finland. At those areas you may find people having quite conservative views. An exceptional feature in generally liberal Finland.
A second major feature of the region are the Swedish-speakers, see Talk below.
Talk
The coastal region Ostrobothnia, as well as the southwest archipelago (bordering to Åland), has a Swedish speaking majority. Swedish-speakers are often in the majority in the countryside along the coasts, and much of the archipelago is more or less exclusively Swedish-speaking; in Närpes, Larsmo, and Korsnäs more than 80 % of the population speak Swedish (and the Finnish may be outnumbered by immigrants). Most cities and towns are bilingual with Finnish as the majority language, but in some small towns in Ostrobothnia like Kristinestad, Jakobstad, and Nykarleby, as well as Pargas in Finland Proper, Swedish is the majority language. Also the city Turku is bilingual, having the only unilingually Swedish university in Finland.
The Swedish dialects spoken in Ostrobothnia are characteristic and archaic. Even native Swedish speakers may face difficulties understanding them. The dialects are however used mostly among fellow dialect speakers, most people are bilingual with standard Swedish – and speak English like everybody else.
Spoken Finnish dialects in Finland Proper and Satakunta are notably different from dialects spoken in the Ostrobothnian provinces. You might find some local dialect based humor at least in Turku and Ostrobothnia.
Get in
After Helsinki, cities in Western Finland have the best international connections.
By plane
Domestically, Turku, Pori, Vaasa and Kokkola have flights from Helsinki, though unless you're connecting from an international flights or in an extreme hurry flying from Helsinki doesn't make much sense — even Kokkola is reachable in just four hours by the fastest trains. In addition Turku and Vaasa are served from Stockholm by SAS, moreover AirBaltic and Wizz Air fly to Turku from Riga and Gdansk, respectively. Tampere airport is the Finnish hub for low-cost airline Ryanair (though as of 2016 Ryanair doesn't serve Tampere in the winter) and fairly close and well connected to Satakunta, Southern Ostrobothnia and Finland Proper.
By train
VR Trains between the three major cities of Turku, Tampere and Helsinki are very frequent. Seinäjoki and Kokkola are on the main line between Helsinki and Oulu, the forth metropolitan area. Also Vaasa, Pori and some other towns are accessible by train.
By bus
Major cities are connected to each other and to Helsinki by frequent buses and most smaller towns have a couple of daily buses to the nearest major city. See Matkahuolto for timetables.
By boat
There are four daily ferries from Stockholm to Turku via Åland; Silja Line and Viking Line have one day and one overnight departure each. From Kapellskär near Norrtälje Finnlines sail to Naantali for those with vehicles, and you can also get in with smaller ferries from various islands in the Åland archipelago. Further north Vaasanlaivat's Wasa Express brings passengers from Umeå to Vaasa. This route has a history of economic problems since it lost taxfree rights, but financing now seems to be being secured for at least some years.
The passages over the Sea of Åland and Kvarken (in Gulf of Bothnia) are short enough also for small boats on a fine day. From Åland one can continue through the Archipelago Sea outside Turku.
By car
There are good roads to the main towns of the region.
Get around
The Finnish main north-south train route from Helsinki passes through Seinäjoki, Bennäs near Jakobstad and Kokkola so if you are moving about in these areas, or along the Turku–Tampere railway, consider taking the train. If you want to travel between places along the coast, train isn't the best alternative. More information about train connections from VR.
Buses are usually the best form of intercity public transportation. Timetables are available from Matkahuolto. In some of the countryside services are very sparse.
Google Maps includes timetables of trains, long distance buses and local transport of many cities and towns. Other useful route planners are Matka.fi for trains and local buses and Matkahuolto Reittiopas for regional buses.
As elsewhere in Finland, driving is the most convenient way to get to remote places. Pay attention to the speed limits on highways — speed cameras are frequent! Unfortunately, national roads in the region, such as national road 8, are usually only simple two-lane highways with a lot of truck traffic and speed limits that change intermittently between 80 and 100.
See
- Turku castle and cathedral.
- The old town of Rauma, an UNESCO World Heritage Site, and other nice wooden old towns.
- The Bronze Age burial site in Sammallahdenmäki, an UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- Kvarken Archipelago, an UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- Giant kettle Pirunpesä in Jalasjärvi, the deepest earth erosion in Europe.
- The plains of Southern Ostrobothnia.
- Kultaranta, the summer residence of the President of Finland in Naantali.
- Alvar Aalto center, the administrative and cultural center of Seinäjoki, designed by Alvar Aalto in the late 1950s.
Itineraries
- National road 8, i.e. E8, is the main road along the coast.
Do
- Sail around the Archipelago Sea, in the Bothnian Sea National Park or the Kvarken Archipelago. Kayaks are a nice alternative.
- Go swimming at Yyteri sand beach near Pori.
- Enjoy music at Finland's oldest rock festival Ruisrock in Turku each July.
- Meet the characters from the Moomin stories in the theme park Muumimaailma in Naantali, walk around the old town and relax at the Naantali Spa.
- Dance tango at the yearly Tangomarkkinat festival in Seinäjoki.
- Celebrate the ending of the summer cottage season with fireworks in Kokkola.
- Watch a local hockey derby in Rauma or Pori
Eat
The Archipelago Sea is, unsurprisingly, famous for seafood dishes. Silakka, the Baltic herring, is commonly available. Due to the mild climate neitsytperuna, literally "virgin potato", the first potatoes of the summer, are an appreciated and quite expensive delicacy, celebrated around the Midsummer in June. Also in Satakunta fish dishes are common, especially the lavaret and smoked lampreys.
Most tomatoes and cucumbers in Finland are produced in coastal Ostrobothnia. Otherwise the Ostrobothnian culinary traditions resemble those further north. Try juustoleipä, a spotted squeaky cheese, or rusinamakkara, a sausage seasoned with raisins and barley pearls.
Juice and jam of sea buckthorn (Finnish: tyrni, Swedish: havtorn) is generally associated with the West Coast.
A fast food speciality from Pori (available elsewhere in the country too) is porilainen — a kind of a "hamburger" made with two slices of white bread, between them a thick slice of sausage and onion dices, pickled cucumber, ketchup and mustard.
Drink
In Satakunta there are still living traditions of making sahti, an ancient beer-like beverage seasoned with juniper branches instead of hops. It is hard to find but definitely worth to try.
Koskenkorva, one of the most recognized brands in Finland, is produced in the Koskenkorva village of Ilmajoki municipality in Southern Ostrobothnia. The distillery is one of the largest employers in the small community.