The Buddha Trails: Training Plan

The Buddha Trails is a single-day trail race through the Buddhist heritage of Bihar in November. Bodh Gaya is the start point. The format is one start line, one finish line, one effort, with a choice of distances rather than a series of stages. Your plan needs to be designed, not improvised. This is a service manual for that build. Follow the steps. Skip none.

Step 1. Understand what a single-day trail race actually demands

A single-day trail race is one sustained effort over mixed ground, with no second morning to fall back on. Your plan must train the body to hold honest effort deep into a long day on dirt track and rural road. Endurance, durability, and consistency. All three. None optional.

The Buddha Trails runs in November and offers a choice of distances rather than fixed stages. Confirm the current distance options on the official event page and pick the one you have actually trained for. Total volume on the day is closer to a long road race or an ultra than to a casual outing, so plan accordingly and scale every number below to your chosen distance.

What a trail race changes about your plan

  1. Long runs move onto mixed surface, not only tarmac, so the legs learn the ground.
  2. Strength and mobility work become a regular discipline, not an afterthought.
  3. Fuelling is rehearsed in training so race-day intake is automatic.
  4. Mental preparation includes pacing patience and the dry-air, cool-morning realities of Bihar in November.

Step 2. The 20-week framework

For a November race, a marathon-distance trail goal wants roughly 20 weeks of structured work; the longest distance options want more, the shortest fewer. Scale the block to your distance. The 20-week version breaks into four parts.

Weeks 1 to 6 — Base. Build the aerobic engine. Five runs a week. Around forty kilometres in week one, ramping toward sixty by week six. One long run on the weekend, building from 18 km to 26 km. All conversational. No quality work.

Weeks 7 to 12 — Build. Move the long run onto mixed-surface trail where you can. Layer in one tempo a week. Add a strength session twice a week. Long run progresses from 26 km toward 30 km.

Weeks 13 to 17 — Specific. Trail-specific long runs on terrain like race day. Build the long run toward 30 to 35 km for a marathon-distance goal. Add the occasional steady run the day after a moderate one, so the legs learn to work when they are not perfectly fresh — useful durability for one long trail effort.

Weeks 18 to 20 — Taper. Drop volume. Hold quality. Sleep more. Travel to Bodh Gaya healthy.

Why mixed-surface long runs matter

The Buddha Trails will ask you to run a long way on dirt track, village road, and hard-packed field edge. The only way to prepare the legs for that is to train on it. Mixed-surface long runs build two things. The ankles and lower legs that handle uneven ground. The pacing patience that a trail surface demands. Train the ground you will race.

Step 3. Daily recovery protocol

Recovery during the training block is what lets you absorb the work and keep building. Make the protocol automatic in training so a hard race week feels familiar.

  1. End of run. Walk for 10 minutes. Drink 500 ml fluid plus electrolytes. Eat 20 to 30 grams of protein and 60 to 80 grams of carbohydrate within 30 minutes.
  2. Within 90 minutes. Shower. Change into clean dry kit. Elevate legs for 10 minutes.
  3. Within 4 hours. Eat a full meal. Carbs, protein, vegetables. Drink to thirst.
  4. Before sleep. Stretch lightly. Foam roll. Inventory the next day's kit.
  5. Sleep. Aim for 8 to 9 hours. This is when adaptation happens.

Read our Indian heat and monsoon guide for hydration adjustments in November Bihar weather. Mornings are cool. Days warm up. The air is dry, which dehydrates runners faster than humid air at the same effort.

Sleep is a training input

Most trail-race finishers will tell you the race is set up by the sleep in the weeks before it. If you sleep poorly through your highest training weeks, the work does not stick. Sleep is data. Track it during the training block. If you cannot reliably sleep 8 hours during peak weeks, your volume is too high or your taper has to be longer.

Step 4. The November Bihar air problem

A Bodh Gaya training plan cannot skip this. Bihar sits on the Indo-Gangetic plain, and that plain has a serious winter air-pollution season. By November, stubble burning and stagnant winter air can push particulate levels up across the region, and a long trail race means breathing deep for hours. Check the AQI for the Gaya area in the days before you travel, and again on race eve. If the reading is poor, treat it as information: adjust your expectations, do not plan a personal-best effort into bad air, and on a genuinely severe morning be honest about whether to run. During the training block, if your own city has bad air days, move hard sessions indoors or reschedule them rather than grinding through.

Step 5. Fueling strategy by phase

Trail-race nutrition has three layers. Daily training calories. Race week loading. In-race fueling.

Daily during training. Add 300 to 500 calories to your usual intake during peak weeks. Carbs dominate. Aim for 5 to 7 grams of carbohydrate per kilogram of body weight per day. Protein at 1.4 to 1.8 grams per kilogram. Fat fills the rest.

Race week. Slightly increase carb intake. Reduce fibre in the 48 hours before the race. Eat familiar food. No experiments.

In-race. Aim for 50 to 80 grams of carbohydrate per hour, scaled to your distance. Add sodium to match your own rehearsed sweat rate. Mix gels with real food. Banana. Boiled potato. Salt biscuits. Dates. Practise the exact rotation in your long runs.

Use the calculators

Use the STRIDD pace and effort calculators to model expected pace, sweat rate, and calorie needs for your chosen distance. A long trail race punishes guesswork. The runner who plans wins the morning.

Step 6. Kit and gear

The Buddha Trails is a single-day trail event. Your kit must work for one long day of mixed terrain, not a multi-day expedition.

  1. Trail shoes with moderate lugs. Proven mileage in them, at least 100 km, not a fresh pair on race day. A second tested pair is sensible insurance.
  2. Hydration vest with two soft flasks and pocket space for gels and a phone, sized to your distance and the aid-station spacing.
  3. Race socks you have run long in before, plus a spare pair for the start area.
  4. Buff or light layer for the cool start, cap, sunglasses, body lubricant, tape for nipples and toes.
  5. Headlamp if your distance and start time mean an early start.
  6. A small first-aid kit, sunscreen, lip balm, cash, ID, phone, bib and pins.

Step 7. The taper and travel plan

Three weeks out, drop volume by 30 percent. Two weeks out, drop another 20. Race week, hold one short tempo and a couple of easy 5 to 8 km runs.

Travel to Bodh Gaya at least one full day before the race, ideally with a little more margin so travel fatigue is not stacked on top of the run. Sleep in your accommodation before the start. In the final 24 to 48 hours, eat familiar food and skip raw salads, untested water, and street food. Walk the first part of the route or the start area if you can. Mental rehearsal matters.

Step 8. Race-morning mobility and warm-up

You cannot run a trail race well on stiff, cold joints, and a Bihar morning is cold. Give yourself 15 to 20 minutes before the start. Begin with general mobility: leg swings front-to-back and side-to-side, walking lunges, gentle hip and ankle circles, a few squats to wake the glutes. Then go trail-specific: full-range calf raises to switch on the calves and arches, a handful of single-leg balance holds each side to fire the ankle stabilisers the trail will demand, and three or four short strides on the actual start surface so the first kilometre is not a cold shock. This is the cheapest injury insurance on the day.

Final step: race-day execution

On race day, follow the rehearsed routine. Wake up about 3 hours before the start. Eat your tested breakfast 2.5 hours before the start. Drink to a plan. Run the warm-up above. Start the race conservatively and hold an effort you could talk through for the opening kilometres. The opening is a deposit. The finish is the withdrawal. Overspend early and the back half of the day unravels.

Build your version of this plan

This guide gives you the system. To get the day-by-day, week-by-week schedule, use our STRIDD plan generator and select an ultramarathon block, scaled to your chosen distance. Or start from the ultramarathon plan template and add the mixed-surface long runs described above. For more on Indian races and trail events, browse the Running Lab archive.

Frequently asked questions

How many weeks should I train for the Buddha Trails?

Plan for around 20 weeks for a marathon-distance trail goal if you have a marathon base; scale longer for the longest distance options and shorter for the shortest. The first 6 weeks build aerobic base, weeks 7 to 12 add quality and move long runs onto mixed surface, weeks 13 to 17 run trail-specific long runs that build toward 30 to 35 km, and the final 3 weeks taper. Confirm your distance on the event page and use the STRIDD plan generator to fit the block to your week.

How should I prepare my legs for the trail surface?

Move your long runs onto mixed surface — dirt track, village road, hard-packed field edge — from the build phase onward, because the Buddha Trails is run on exactly that ground. Add the occasional steady run the day after a moderate one so the legs learn to work when they are not perfectly fresh. Two strength sessions a week throughout the block protect the ankles and lower legs that uneven ground loads.

How much should I eat during the race?

Aim for 50 to 80 grams of carbohydrate per hour during the race, scaled to your distance, with sodium matched to your own rehearsed sweat rate. In the training block, eat 5 to 7 grams of carbohydrate per kilogram of body weight per day during peak weeks and 1.4 to 1.8 grams of protein per kilogram. After the finish, refuel within 30 minutes. Pack familiar foods that travel well and practise the exact rotation in long runs.

What kit list is essential for the Buddha Trails?

Pack for one long day, not a multi-day expedition: trail shoes with moderate lugs and proven mileage (a second tested pair is sensible insurance), a hydration vest with two flasks sized to your distance, race socks you have run long in plus a spare pair for the start, buff or light layer for the cool start, cap, body lubricant, tape, a headlamp if your start is early, a small first-aid kit, sunscreen, and your tested race fuel. Carry what one day needs.

How do I recover during the training block and after the race?

In training: walk 10 minutes after each long run, drink 500 ml of fluid plus electrolytes, eat 60 to 80 g carbs and 20 to 30 g protein within 30 minutes, shower, change, elevate legs, eat a full meal within 4 hours, and aim for 8 to 9 hours of sleep. After the race itself, walk it out, refuel within 30 minutes, hydrate steadily, and let how your legs feel rather than the calendar decide when you run hard again.

Should I run with a coach for the Buddha Trails?

If this is your first trail race, a coach helps shape the mixed-surface long runs, the strength work, and the recovery routine. If you are self-coached, you can use the STRIDD plan generator and read the Running Lab archive for guidance. Either way, do not improvise. A long single-day trail race has real endurance and durability demands that need a structured build.