I came to running late, at thirty-four, when most of my friends had already given up on it. The first race I ran in Bengaluru was the Hennur Bamboo Half Marathon in August. Monsoon. Forest. A course that felt invented for me to fall in love with. This guide is the love letter I owe it — what the course looks like, what the elevation does to your legs, and what August in Bengaluru asks of you.
Hennur Bamboo is one of the rare half marathons in India built around a forest, not a highway. The route weaves through the bamboo groves of Hennur and the surrounding green belt in northeast Bengaluru. August means monsoon. Soft ground. Wet leaves underfoot. A different kind of run.
The course, in three movements
Every well-built race has a story. Hennur tells it in three acts.
The start
The first three kilometres roll out from the start area through residential streets before turning into the bamboo and forest sections. Gentle gradients. Cool monsoon air. The temptation is to run fast because everything feels easy and the air smells like wet earth and eucalyptus.
The middle forest
5K to 15K is the heart of the race — bamboo groves, packed earth paths, occasional puddles and slick sections from the morning rain. The forest canopy holds the temperature low even as the city wakes up around you. You will run slower here than your watch wants. That's correct.
The return
The final stretch back to the finish runs through clearer paths and short tarmac sections. After hours in the green, the open sky feels strange. Pace usually picks up here without effort, but watch your form — the wet ground earlier will have tired stabiliser muscles.
The elevation story
Hennur is not flat, but it's not aggressive. The elevation profile is the kind that rewards even pacing.
Gentle rolling profile
The course gains and loses elevation in small increments — short rises, gentle descents, no sustained climbs. Total elevation gain is moderate, the kind that tires legs gradually without ever feeling like a 'climb'. This is harder to pace than a single big hill, because the cost compounds invisibly.
Where it costs you
Most blow-ups happen around 13-15K. Not because the gradient changes. Because the cumulative rises have drained more than runners expect, and the wet surface has slowed turnover all morning. The forest paths slow you in ways your GPS misses.
How to pace it
Run by effort, not pace. Heart rate should drift up slowly through the race. Cadence should stay high — quick, light foot strikes on soft ground. The runner who tries to chase 5:30/km splits on a wet bamboo path is the runner who walks the last 4K.
August in Bengaluru: monsoon racing
This is not the dry-season half. This is something else.
The climate
Cool, humid, often wet. Temperatures at 6 AM are 20-23°C. Humidity 85-95%. The forest holds moisture. You'll sweat even though it feels cool. Read the STRIDD heat and monsoon guide for sweat-rate protocols.
What to wear
A technical singlet that dries fast. Shorts you've trained in. Trail or hybrid shoes with grippy outsoles — wet bamboo paths are slick. Avoid pure road racers; they slide. Anti-chafe everywhere, especially under the singlet line and inner thighs. Wet skin chafes faster than dry.
Pre-race nutrition in monsoon
Same as any race, but pay attention to hydration. Cool weather lies about sweat loss. Drink at every aid station even if you don't feel thirsty.
Training for Hennur Bamboo specifically
I trained for my first Hennur on a flat city plan. I came up short by 11 minutes on my goal. The plan I'd recommend now is different.
Surface-specific long runs
Run at least four long runs on soft surface — Cubbon Park, Lalbagh, Sankey Tank's mud path, any green-belt area. The body learns the slightly different mechanics: lower impact, slightly slower turnover, more demand on stabiliser muscles.
Hill repeats with low gradient
The course's gentle rolling profile is best trained with gentle rolling repeats. Find a 300-500m stretch with a 3-4% gradient. Run 6-8 efforts at half-marathon effort uphill, jog down. Once a week from week four. Browse the STRIDD half-marathon plan library for structured options.
Wet-weather runs
Run two or three long runs in actual rain. The body learns how to handle wet shoes, chafing risks, and visibility. The first 8K of Hennur Bamboo can be heavily wet some years — the runner who's already done long wet runs is calm, the one who hasn't is in trouble.
Race day, with care
The first time I ran Hennur, I didn't sleep the night before. I was too excited about running in the rain. Don't be me.
The night before
Lay out kit by 6 PM. Eat your usual carb dinner by 7:30. Sleep by 10. Race day in Bengaluru's monsoon means an early wake — most starts are before 6 AM to clear the worst of the heat that's gathering by 9.
The first kilometre
Slower than feels right. The cool monsoon air will make goal pace feel like easy pace. It is not. You will pay for every second banked here, three times over, somewhere around 14K.
The middle forest
Settle. Drink at every station. Fuel at 8K. Match your effort to the rhythm of the forest — quick feet on wet ground, soft hands, eyes 10 metres ahead, not on the watch.
The finish
The last 3K rolls back toward the start area. If you've paced honestly, pick up the effort kilometre by kilometre. If you've been brave, you're surviving. Either way, the finish is wet, green, and worth every drop of sweat.
Build your half-marathon plan at the STRIDD plan generator, use the calculators to pace yourself, and visit Running Lab for more event guides. Hennur Bamboo is the rare race where the city forgets itself for a morning and the forest takes over. Train it like you'd respect a forest — quietly, completely.