The Great Himalayan Running Festival is a multi-day mountain race series staged out of Manali in September. Altitude, weather, and a series of stages that ask different things of your body each day. This course guide is built as a service flow — read it once for the structure, then again for the section that matches your distance.
Step 1: Understand the festival format
The Great Himalayan Running Festival is not a single race. It is a series across multiple days with multiple distance options. Runners choose their distance based on experience, altitude tolerance, and time available.
This matters for course strategy. A single-day race lets you empty the tank. A multi-day event punishes the same approach. Your reading of the course depends on which distance you are running and which days you are racing.
What to confirm before training
Distance. Day count. Cumulative elevation. The event page carries the current edition's specifics — read it before locking your training plan.
Step 2: Read the altitude profile
Manali sits at around 2,000 metres. Course routes climb from there. September weather is generally clear, but the temperature swings between morning and afternoon are larger than coastal runners are used to.
The altitude rule
Above 1,800 metres, your sustainable pace drops by ten to twenty percent compared to sea level. Above 2,500 metres, drop another five to ten percent. This is not a fitness issue. This is physiology. The STRIDD calculators can convert your sea-level baseline into altitude-adjusted targets so your splits do not lie to you.
The acclimatisation rule
Arrive in Manali at least three days before your first race day. Five days is better. The first 24 hours, do not run. Walk. Hike easily. Hydrate aggressively. From day three, short easy jogs at 30 to 40 percent of your usual intensity.
Step 3: Section the course by terrain
Mountain race courses are not uniform. They reward runners who break them into segments and assign each segment a different tactic.
Forest paths
Soft underfoot, often shaded, generally rolling. These are running sections. Cover ground at a controlled effort. Watch for roots in low light. Eyes ten metres ahead.
Open ridge sections
Wind exposed. Often runnable. Cool quickly. Use the cooler air to extend your push rather than to slack pace. Add a layer if the ridge runs longer than ten minutes.
Climbs
Power-hike anything that drops your run pace below 10 min/km at altitude. Hands on knees. Short steps. Heart rate steady. Trying to run every gradient in the Himalayas is what makes day two unrunnable.
Descents
Short stride, quick turnover, controlled landings. Do not brake with your quads. Save them for the next climb. Descents are recovery sections, not racing sections.
Step 4: Build a weather and clothing plan
September in Manali sits in the 10 to 22 degree Celsius range. Mornings can drop to 6 to 8 degrees. Afternoons on exposed ridges can reach 24.
Layering protocol
- Base layer — moisture-wicking technical tee.
- Mid layer — light long-sleeve, removable.
- Shell — windproof, packable. Mandatory on ridge sections.
- Cap and sunglasses — UV at altitude is stronger than the temperature suggests.
Rain is uncommon but possible. Carry a packable shell on any stage longer than two hours. The STRIDD heat and monsoon guide covers monsoon residue planning that still matters in early September.
Step 5: Plan fuelling for altitude
Altitude blunts hunger. You will need to eat more than you feel like eating, especially in the first 48 hours after arrival.
The protocol
Breakfast within an hour of waking. Snacks every two hours during rest days. On race days, a gel or solid carb every 35 to 45 minutes from kilometre 5. 600 to 800 ml of fluid per hour with electrolytes.
Post-stage, eat within thirty minutes. Carbs and protein in a 3 to 1 ratio. The recovery you do this evening is the pace you run tomorrow.
Step 6: Pace each stage by effort, not by watch
Altitude makes pace-based running unreliable. Heart rate or perceived effort is the only honest measure.
The effort zones
Easy — full conversation possible. Most of every stage.
Steady — short sentences only. Used on long flat or rolling sections.
Hard — single words. Reserved for the final two to three kilometres of a stage.
If you feel hard effort on a climb at kilometre 5, you are pushing too early. The STRIDD ultramarathon plan structures effort-based training so you arrive at the festival knowing what each zone feels like.
Step 7: Manage the multi-day fatigue curve
The runners who finish strong at the Great Himalayan Running Festival are not the fastest. They are the ones who managed the cumulative load best.
The recovery checklist
- Eat within thirty minutes of finishing each stage.
- Walk for ten minutes one hour after finishing.
- Elevate legs for fifteen minutes before bed.
- Sleep eight to nine hours.
- Hydrate continuously through the evening.
- Avoid heavy stretching, which can aggravate micro-tears.
Step 8: Plan a sleep and acclimatisation routine in Manali
The week of the festival is not the time to sightsee or experiment with food. Treat the days in Manali as part of the race plan.
The arrival-week routine
- Day 1 — walk, hike easily, do not run.
- Day 2 — short easy 20-minute jog at very low intensity.
- Day 3 — 30 to 40-minute easy jog with a few short strides at the end.
- Day 4 — pre-race shakeout — 15 minutes easy.
- Eat at consistent times. Hydrate continuously. Sleep eight to nine hours each night.
Step 9: Next step
Open the STRIDD plan generator, enter your distance and start date, and let it shape a build that accounts for altitude weeks and acclimatisation days. For more reading on mountain racing in India, the STRIDD Running Lab archive has guides on altitude prep, gear, and recovery.