The Hennur Bamboo Half Marathon is run in August in the forested lanes around Hennur in Bengaluru. It is a monsoon race. The bamboo arches overhead. The road is dappled, wet in patches, cooler than other August runs in India. This is a half marathon that asks for a specific kind of training — one that respects the monsoon, the forest, and the body that has to keep itself upright on wet leaves.
This is the plan. Twelve weeks. Built like a service onboarding flow. Step by step. Reason by reason. Run by run.
Step 1: Understand what this race is
The Hennur Bamboo Half Marathon is a forest half marathon in northern Bengaluru. The course threads through tree cover, narrow shaded lanes, and parts of the Hennur forest microclimate. The August date places the race firmly inside the southwest monsoon. Mornings are cool. Air is wet. The road can be slick.
This is, by Indian half marathon standards, one of the friendlier weather races. Bengaluru's monsoon temperatures sit lower than coastal cities. The canopy adds shade. But the surface is the variable. Wet road and wet leaves change how a runner lands, how the calves load, and how confident the stride can be.
Why the forest changes the training
You train for a forest course differently than you train for an open road. The body needs more proprioceptive work. Strong ankles. Strong calves. The eye learns to scan five metres ahead. The plan below builds those small habits.
Why the monsoon changes the training
You train in the monsoon for a monsoon race. That means running in rain rather than waiting it out. It means testing kit. It means accepting that some long runs will be done in wet shoes. Read the heat and monsoon guide for the climate protocol.
Step 2: The 12-week framework
Twelve weeks is the minimum useful block for a half marathon if you already run consistently. If you are new to running, plan 16 to 20 weeks instead. Break the block into four phases.
Phase 1: Base (weeks 1 to 4)
Five runs a week. Four easy. One long run building from 10 km to 16 km. The job is to build aerobic capacity. No race-pace work yet. Add one strength session a week from week 2 onwards.
Phase 2: Strength (weeks 5 to 8)
Introduce structure. One tempo run a week at half-marathon effort. One long run with the last 4 to 6 km at goal pace. One easy or hill day. The body learns to handle goal effort on fatigued legs.
Phase 3: Specificity (weeks 9 to 11)
Half marathon pace volume goes up. Long runs hit 18 to 20 km with 8 to 10 km at goal pace inside. One mid-week medium-long run. The total volume peaks. Sleep more. Eat well.
Phase 4: Taper (week 12)
Volume drops 30 percent in the first week of taper and 50 percent in race week. Intensity stays brief. The taper is where confidence settles. Trust it.
Step 3: Weekly rhythm that fits Indian mornings
Indian cities run in the early morning. Bengaluru in monsoon runs at first light or before. Plan the week around the conditions.
Monday: easy 6 to 8 km. Tuesday: tempo or intervals. Wednesday: easy 6 km. Thursday: medium-long easy or hill repeats. Friday: rest or 5 km recovery jog. Saturday: long run. Sunday: rest or cross-train.
Why one strength session is non-negotiable
The Hennur course is forested. The surface is uneven in patches. Ankle and calf strength reduces injury risk. Squats, lunges, calf raises, single-leg deadlifts, planks. Twenty to thirty minutes. Once a week. Strength is the cheapest mileage you will ever buy.
Why cross-training helps
One day of low-impact cross-training, especially if you are a higher-mileage runner. Swimming or cycling. Both are excellent. Both protect your knees while building aerobic fitness.
Step 4: Race-specific work
Generic plans get you to a finish line. Course-specific work gets you to a strong finish.
Wet-weather long runs
Schedule at least three long runs in actual rain during the middle phases. Test your kit. Test your shoes' grip. Test your skin's response to wet kit. The race-day surface will not be the surface you have always trained on.
Pace specific to the course
The Hennur course has gentle undulations and shaded sections. Run pace-specific intervals on similar terrain if possible. Cubbon Park or Lalbagh are workable substitutes if you live in central Bengaluru. Train where it looks like the race.
Build a hydration and fuelling rehearsal
Four weeks out, run a 16 to 18 km long run dressed exactly as you will dress for race day. Same shoes. Same shorts. Same gels. Same watch settings. This single long run replaces three nights of nervous packing.
Step 5: Pacing protocol for race day
A half marathon is a long enough race to reward patience and short enough to punish recklessness. The Hennur course rewards both.
The first 5 km
Run 8 to 10 seconds per kilometre slower than goal pace. The forest exits early. The shade is generous. Resist the temptation to surge. The crowd you pass in the first 5 km is the crowd you will see again at kilometre 17 if you do not pace honestly.
5 km to 12 km
Settle into goal pace. The pace will flicker around 5 seconds either side of goal pace as the terrain dictates. Effort stays steady. Sip at every aid station from kilometre 4 onwards. Take a gel at 45 minutes if your race is long enough to need it.
12 km to 18 km
The honest middle. Defend pace. Lift cadence if the pace slips. This is where Bengaluru's mid-monsoon humidity will quietly add work to your heart rate without your noticing. Trust effort, not pace.
18 km to finish
Run by purpose. Pick one runner ahead. Catch them. Then the next. Save the final sprint for the last 300 metres. A negative split on a wet forest course is a small kind of victory.
Step 6: Race-week protocol
Eat normally through Tuesday. Increase carbohydrate intake from Wednesday onward. Cut fibre from Thursday. Hydrate Friday and Saturday. Race morning eat what you have rehearsed three hours before the gun.
Lay kit out Friday night. Watch charged. Bib pinned. Shoes ready. Sleep early Friday. The night before, do not worry if sleep is short. Two good nights two days out matter more than the eve.
Putting the plan to work
Use a structured half marathon plan as your template, or generate one in the STRIDD plan generator tuned to your schedule. Use the calculators to set a realistic goal based on a recent 10K performance. Read Running Lab for first-hand essays from Bengaluru runners. Bookmark the Hennur Bamboo Half Marathon event page for registration and logistics.
The forest is generous to runners who arrive prepared. Build the block. Trust the plan. Then meet the bamboo at dawn.