The Kaveri Trail Marathon is run in mid-November along the Kaveri river near Srirangapatna. It is a Karnataka classic, an hour and a half from Bengaluru, and the kind of race that earns you a different kind of marathon medal — one with mud on it. This plan exists for runners who already run road and want to step onto trail without losing the next twelve weeks of training.
One sentence on the race, then we plan
The Kaveri Trail Marathon is a riverside trail marathon along the Kaveri in Karnataka, run in mid-November once the monsoon has cleared. That sentence does the work. It tells you the route is mixed-surface, the day is post-monsoon rather than wet, and your training will not transfer cleanly from a city road build. The course usually offers more than one distance, and it traces the river closely, near Srirangapatna and the Ranganathittu Bird Sanctuary. Confirm the distance options and the route map for your edition before you lock a plan to it.
Most plans for the Kaveri fail in one of two ways. Either they treat the race like a road marathon — too much pace, too little terrain — or they treat it like a serious mountain ultra — too many hills, too little flat. The truth is in the middle. Train for a long, undulating run on real surface. The rest is detail.
Build the plan in three blocks
Sixteen weeks is the standard build. The shape: base, specificity, sharpen and taper. Each block has one job.
Block 1: Base (weeks 1-6)
Run four to five times a week. One long run that grows from 14 km to 26 km. One mid-week run with strides. The rest easy. Surface should be 70% road, 30% trail. The goal in this block is to build aerobic capacity and to teach your ankles what uneven looks like. By the end of week 6, you should be able to do a 26 km long run on Sunday and walk on Monday without limping.
Block 2: Specificity (weeks 7-12)
This is where the Kaveri shape arrives. Move long runs onto trail or mixed terrain wherever you can find it. In Bengaluru, that's Turahalli forest, the back roads near Nandi Hills, or the trails outside Devanahalli. In Mysuru, the Chamundi periphery works. Add one quality session a week: 5 x 1 km at marathon pace on flat, or 4 x 8 minutes at threshold with 2 minutes jog.
Long runs grow from 28 to 34 km. Two of these should include at least 12 km on unpaved surface. This is non-negotiable. The trail teaches you things road never will.
Block 3: Sharpen and taper (weeks 13-16)
Hold one long run at 32-34 km in week 13. Drop volume by 30% in week 14, by 50% in week 15. Keep one short, sharp session in race week — 4 x 1 km at marathon pace, or 6 x 400 m at threshold. Sleep is the most underrated training session in this block.
Train the surface, not just the engine
Road marathoners turning up to Kaveri without trail prep are the runners who blow up at km 30. The surface eats more energy than the legs expect. Specificity solves it.
The trail miles that matter
Aim for at least 200-250 km of trail in your 16-week build. Spread across long runs, mid-week runs, and one trail-only weekend if you can manage it. The terrain you should pick: packed dirt, broken tar, the occasional cattle path. Skip technical mountain trail; the Kaveri isn't that. Skip pure road; the Kaveri isn't that either.
The shoes that matter
A light hybrid trail shoe with moderate lugs. Break it in for at least 100 km before race day. Avoid full road racers and avoid heavy trail beasts. The middle ground is the right ground for Kaveri. The Running Lab archive has shoe reviews if you want to read before you buy.
Fuel and hydration for a post-monsoon mid-November
Mid-November in Srirangapatna means the monsoon has gone, the mornings can be cool, and the afternoon sun still carries weight once it climbs. The fuel and hydration plan has to match that arc, not a peak-monsoon day.
Practise the gel routine
From week 4, take a gel every 35-40 minutes on every long run. Start at km 10, not km 0. Drink 150 ml of water with each gel. By race day, your gut should know the routine the way your hand knows your phone. If gels don't sit well, switch to dates, banana, or boiled potato. The point isn't what — the point is consistency.
Hydrate for a warming morning
Train with electrolyte tabs from week 6. The running in Indian heat and monsoon guide has the full protocol; the compressed version is: 500-750 ml per hour, half plain water and half electrolyte, on warm long runs. Watch for salt rings on your tee. Watch for cramping in the calves. Adjust upward, not downward.
Pace the Kaveri honestly
Most runners arrive at the Kaveri with road-pace expectations. The trail does not care. Add 8-12 minutes to your projected marathon time for surface, plus a few more for the warmth that builds through a mid-November morning.
Use the calculators
Plug your most recent half-marathon time into the STRIDD calculators. Take the projected marathon time. Apply the adjustment above. That is your honest target. Plan your splits around it.
Or use the ultra plan
If you'd rather follow a structured program, use the ultramarathon training plan at marathon distance. Why an ultra plan? Because the surface and the long, steady effort extend the day and the ultra plan teaches you to fuel for that. It is the right tool for the right job.
Or build from scratch
If you don't have a plan, set one up in 90 seconds using the STRIDD plan generator. Pick the marathon focus, set Srirangapatna as the race location, and let the tool reverse-engineer your blocks.
Race week and the start line
Travel to Srirangapatna on Friday afternoon if you're coming from Bengaluru, Mysuru, Mangaluru, or further afield. Saturday is for kit check, a 20-minute shake-out, and one large carb-heavy lunch. Eat dal-rice or bisi bele bath, both Karnataka classics that travel well in the gut. Hydrate steadily through Saturday. Sleep by 10 PM.
On race morning, wake 2.5 hours before flag-off. Eat your standard breakfast. Visit the toilet at the venue. Reach the start 40 minutes early. Then run the plan. The long riverside sections pass close to the Ranganathittu Bird Sanctuary, which is a protected bird habitat, so keep the noise down through there, stay on the marked trail, and carry your trash to the next bin.
The first kilometre matters most
Run the first kilometre 20-25 seconds per km slower than your goal average. The trail will let you go faster early. Don't. The next 41 kilometres will reward your patience and punish your impatience. Run the first third by effort, the middle third by rhythm, and the final third by trust in the training.
After the line
Walk for ten minutes. Drink 500 ml. Eat real food in the first hour. Write three lines in your phone: what worked, what failed, what's next. Read it again in three weeks when you start planning the next race. The notes are how you compound the lessons.
The Kaveri Trail Marathon is not the fastest medal you'll earn. It will likely be one of the most memorable. Train the surface. Trust the protocol. River does the rest.