If you think Finland is boring, you’ve simply taken the wrong route.
Many travelers use Finland merely as a transit country, rushing north as fast as possible to reach their main goal: Nordkapp (North Cape). That’s why many people claim Finland is boring - flat, endless forests, nothing but trees until Norway. What most don’t realize is that Finland becomes a wonderful travel destination the moment you leave the highway. And that was exactly our intention.
Leaving the Highway Changes Everything
Riding a motorcycle through Finland from south to north sounds peaceful on paper - lakes, forests, quiet roads - but the moment you decide to avoid the dull central highway and follow the remote route along the Russian border, the whole trip transforms into something far more intense, unpredictable, and unforgettable. We were two bikes heading north and Finland made sure we earned every kilometer.
Weather That Tests Your Spirit
The weather set the tone early. Sunshine disappeared almost as quickly as it arrived, followed by rain that came in every imaginable form: soft drizzle, sideways needles, sudden downpours, and that mysterious kind of wetness that somehow comes from below. Temperatures swung between “refreshing” and “why are my fingers numb,” but that’s part of the charm. Finland doesn’t try to impress you with perfect weather. It impresses you with everything that comes despite it.
Finland: A Wild‑Camping Paradise
What truly saves you out there are the endless opportunities for wild camping. Thanks to the Everyman’s Right, you can pitch your tent almost anywhere, and the country feels like it was designed for exactly that. But the real heroes of the trip are the countless free wilderness huts scattered across the land.
These shelters generally come in two varieties. The basic version is an open‑front structure that offers wind and weather protection - and if you’re lucky, it’s big enough to pitch a tent inside. Then there’s the luxury version: a fully enclosed pyramid‑shaped hut with a fire pit in the center. After a long, wet day on the bike, stumbling upon one feels like discovering a luxury resort. You roll in soaked, light a fire, hang your gear to dry, cook something warm, and suddenly the world makes sense again.
Lakes, Ferries, and Forgotten Villages
The southern part of the country is a maze of lakes and forests, a landscape so repetitive and beautiful that you start to lose track of where you are. Every now and then, a free ferry appears out of nowhere to carry you across a stretch of water, no ticket, no fuss, just a quiet glide through misty scenery. Old wooden churches pop up in tiny villages, standing there like time capsules from centuries past. And then, right near the Russian border, you find a Winter War memorial cemetery - a silent, haunting reminder of the soldiers who fell in 1939–40. Standing alone in the borderland forest, it captures the harshness of the war and the resilience of the people who endured it
One of the most surprising highlights was Paalasmaa, a small archipelago in the middle of nowhere. Three islands connected by bridges, surrounded by calm water and absolute silence. We camped there and felt like we had the entire world to ourselves.
Eventually, the landscape opened up and we reached Rovaniemi, where the Arctic Circle cuts across the road. There’s a sign, of course, and the obligatory photo stop, and just beyond it the famous Santa Claus Village. Touristy, kitschy, and somehow still charming enough that you can’t skip it and perfect for a small stop.
The Magic of the Midnight Sun
North of Rovaniemi, the land becomes wilder. Reindeer wander across the road like they own it, which, to be fair, they kind of do. Every rustle in the forest makes you wonder if it’s a bear, and even if you never see one, the possibility adds a certain spice to camping. And then there’s the midnight sun - the moment when time stops mattering because it simply doesn’t get dark. You cook dinner at midnight, ride at 11 p.m., and your brain keeps insisting it’s early afternoon. It’s disorienting, magical, and strangely addictive.
Where Fuel Stations Become Survival
The further north we rode, the emptier everything became. Villages turned into clusters of houses, then into single cabins, then into nothing at all. Fuel stations became rare enough to trigger mild existential panic. In this region, the rule is simple: if you see a gas pump, you stop. Even if your tank is half full. Especially if your tank is half full.
By the time we reached the far north, we realized that Finland isn’t a destination you simply visit. It’s a place that slowly gets under your skin. It’s cold, wet, lonely, and demanding - but also peaceful, generous, and breathtakingly beautiful. Riding along the Russian border instead of the main highway turned the journey into an adventure full of contrasts: harsh weather and warm huts, endless forests and sudden lakes, silence and the roar of the engine, isolation and the comfort of a campfire.
Finland doesn’t give you an easy trip. It gives you a real one. And that’s exactly why it stays with you long after the road ends.