I ran my first ultra in 2022. My coach asked me, two weeks before, whether I had actually trained for hills. I lied. I told him yes. I had not. The Malnad Ultra, run on the estate and forest trails of the Western Ghats of Karnataka, taught me over many hours that the Ghats do not care about your lie. They care about what is in your legs. This guide is what I wish someone had given me before that race.
Malnad runs through coffee estates, Western Ghat ridges, and forest tracks in the post-monsoon window. The training plan that earns this finish line is built around three ideas: hike-power, hill specificity, and the willingness to do the unglamorous work of back-to-back long days.
What the Malnad Ultra actually asks of you
Most runners read 'trail ultra' and imagine flat, soft, scenic running. Malnad is a different animal. The Ghats roll. The estates climb. The forest paths slip and recover, slip and recover, for hours. The event runs more than one distance, with 30K, 50K and 100K options and their own cut-off times, so pick yours early and let it shape the build.
The terrain reality
Coffee-estate paths are sometimes rolling, sometimes steep. Forest tracks vary from packed earth to loose gravel. The Western Ghats in the post-monsoon window are still drying out from the rains, so expect damp ground in the early hours and firmer trail by midday. The trails also stay leech-prone in this window, which is a kit problem, not a training one, but it is worth knowing before you arrive.
The post-monsoon climate
The post-monsoon window is the kindest the Western Ghats get. Cool, damp mornings. Warmer but manageable afternoons. Moderate humidity. The actual race conditions are about as forgiving as Indian trail running offers. That is exactly why so many runners under-train.
The mental piece
The kindness of the climate hides the difficulty of the course. Runners who have done flat marathons think Malnad is a longer version. It is not. It is hours of climbing, descending, and the slow unraveling of pace into hike-power.
The 18-week build
I will tell you the truth: I did this race the first time on a 12-week plan and a lot of denial. The plan I wish I had run was 18 weeks. Four blocks, each with a job.
Weeks 1 to 5: aerobic base
Five runs a week. Long run from 15K to 25K on whatever rolling terrain you can find. No tempo, no intervals. Just easy effort, long enough that your legs learn what 'all day' feels like. Use the ultra plan library for week-by-week structures.
Weeks 6 to 10: build
Six runs a week. One tempo of 30 to 40 minutes at moderate effort on rolling terrain. One long run that grows from 28K to 36K, with 800 to 1500 m of elevation gain. One medium-long run with hill repeats. Two recovery runs. Strength twice a week: single-leg, glute, calf.
Weeks 11 to 15: ultra-specific
One back-to-back weekend every fortnight. Saturday: 22 to 26K on hills. Sunday: 32 to 42K with deliberate fueling and gear practice. Wednesday tempo of 8 to 10K. The peak week hits 90 to 110K total volume for serious finishers.
Weeks 16 to 18: taper
Week 16: drop 25 percent volume. Week 17: another 30 percent. Race week: two short easy runs, a 20-minute jog the day before, no surprises.
Training for hills when you don't live in hills
I live in a flat city. So do most of you. Here is what works.
Hill repeats on the only hill you have
Find one steep gradient, even an overpass or a flyover ramp. Run 6 to 10 efforts of 60 to 90 seconds uphill at hard effort, jog down between. Once a week from week six. The body learns vertical effort through repetition, not topography.
Stairs and step-ups
Stairwells. Skybridges. Any tall structure. 10 to 15 minutes of stair climbing twice a week, slow and controlled. Step-ups onto a low bench, 3 sets of 12 per leg, twice a week. Mountains are built on small ladders.
One destination weekend
If you can, take one weekend trip to actual hills six to eight weeks before race day. Sahyadri, Nilgiri foothills, Western Ghats day trips. Run one long day on real terrain. The mental and physical adaptation from one weekend is disproportionate.
Fueling, gear, and what the coffee estates demand
The estates are beautiful. They are also relentless on the gut and the gear. One note before the specifics: the organiser publishes an official mandatory-kit rulebook for the Malnad Ultra. Follow that document. What follows is the reasoning behind your kit, not a substitute for the official list.
Fueling cadence
60 to 90 grams of carbohydrate per hour. Gels every 30 minutes. Real food such as dates, banana, and peanut butter sandwiches every 60 minutes. Pair every alternate gel with electrolyte. Train your stomach in long runs from week eight. Race day is no place for new flavours.
Gear specifics
Trail shoes with 4 to 6 mm lugs. Vest with 1.5 to 2L hydration capacity. Soft flasks for sports drink. Cap, sunglasses, sunscreen. A light wind layer for the cool mornings. Anti-chafe everywhere. Because the post-monsoon trails are leech-prone, pack leech socks or knee-high socks, a pouch of salt, and a small bottle of Dettol or antiseptic, and treat your socks and shoe tops before the start. Read the STRIDD heat and monsoon guide for fluid-loss protocols even in cooler post-monsoon air.
Aid stations
Spaced 5 to 8K apart, depending on terrain. Carry your own electrolyte tablets. Restock fluids fully at each station. Do not run dry between aid stations, because even one missed top-up costs you the next 90 minutes. Track your buffer against the cut-off times for your distance while you are there.
Race day, in three movements
I started running at 34. I am still learning to race. But the rhythm of the Malnad day, I think I understand now.
The first three hours
Run by effort. Hike every steep climb. The single most important decision is the one to walk early when your legs want to run. You buy yourself the back half by spending less of yourself in the first.
The middle hours
The race lives here. Fueling every 30 minutes. Drinking at every station. Eating real food when gels turn your stomach. Walking the climbs even when your competitors are running them. The estates roll on. The forest welcomes you in and out.
The closing kilometres
If you have paced honestly, the last 8 to 10K rewards you. The descents become friends, not enemies. The finish line, coffee and a hot meal, feels earned, not stolen. The Western Ghats give you something they never gave me on my first race: a finish line where I was not broken.
Build your plan at the STRIDD plan generator, use the calculators to pace yourself honestly, and browse Running Lab for more guides. Malnad does not reward fantasy. It rewards the runner who trained, fed, and walked the hills early. Be that runner.