Pune Running Beyond Myself is a December half marathon through the Sahyadri foothills. The course follows a hill pattern, the weather is generous, and Pune's running community shows up in force. This plan is built as a service-design flow: each block has a job, each session earns its place, and the protocol is the same whether you're chasing a sub-1:45 or a first-ever finish.
Step 1: Set the right plan length
Before any training week is written, decide how long the build is. Twelve weeks is the standard. Sixteen if you're starting from low mileage. Eight if you're already in shape and just need to sharpen.
How to decide
- Check your current weekly mileage. Below 20 km? Go sixteen weeks. 20-30 km? Twelve works. Above 30 km with a recent 10K or half? Eight weeks is fine.
- Check the calendar. Pune Running Beyond Myself is in December. Count backwards from race day. If today is more than 16 weeks out, you have time for the slow build. If less, compress accordingly.
- Set the start date in the STRIDD plan generator. Pick the half-marathon focus. Set Pune as the race location. The tool will reverse-engineer the blocks for you.
Step 2: Structure the build in three blocks
Every good half-marathon plan has three jobs, in order: build aerobic capacity, build race-specific fitness, and sharpen for race day.
Block 1: Base (weeks 1-4 for a twelve-week build)
Four to five runs a week. One long run growing from 12 km to 18 km. One mid-week run with four strides at the end. The rest easy and conversational. The goal: build volume your knees can absorb. Surface should be 60% road, 40% gentle hill. The Sahyadri foothills aren't dramatic, but they're real, and your training should reflect that.
Block 2: Race-specific (weeks 5-9)
Add one quality session per week. Options:
- 4 x 1 km at goal half-marathon pace with 90 seconds jog recovery.
- 5 x 1.5 km at marathon pace with 60 seconds jog recovery.
- 3 x 2 km at threshold pace with 2 minutes jog recovery.
Long runs grow from 18 to 22 km, with the last 4-6 km at race pace on alternate weekends. Add one hill session every two weeks: 6 x 60 seconds uphill at hard effort, walk down for recovery.
Block 3: Sharpen and taper (weeks 10-12)
Hold the quality session at reduced volume. Drop weekly mileage by 25% in week 11, by 50% in race week. Keep one short race-pace session in race week — 4 x 1 km at goal pace — to remind the legs what fast feels like. Sleep, hydrate, eat clean.
Step 3: Train for the Sahyadri hill pattern
The Pune Running Beyond Myself course has a hill profile. Not mountains, not pancakes — undulating, with stretches that climb and descend through the foothills. Your training has to match.
Why hill specificity matters here
A flat half-marathon plan does not prepare you for an undulating one. The muscles that handle climbs and the muscles that absorb descents are not the same as the muscles that handle flat tarmac. Hill sessions and hilly long runs build both.
Where to do hill work in Pune
Pune itself has good hill training routes. ARAI Hill, Vetal Hill, Pashan Lake loop with the surrounding inclines, and Sinhagad Fort approach all work for hill specificity. From week 4, do one hilly long run every two weeks, plus one weekly hill repeats session.
What if you live outside Pune?
Most Indian cities have a hill option within a short drive. In Bengaluru, that's Nandi Hills. In Hyderabad, it's the Banjara Hills loop or a drive to Yadagirigutta. In Chennai, it's St. Thomas Mount or a weekend trip to Yelagiri. In Delhi, it's the Aravalli loops. Adapt the plan to your local terrain.
Step 4: Run the plan with the right tools
A plan without measurement is a plan without feedback. Track three things every week: weekly mileage, weekly elevation gain, and weekly long-run duration.
Use the calculators
Plug your most recent 10K time into the STRIDD calculators. Read the predicted half-marathon time. That is your goal pace. The calculators also give you heart rate zones and training paces for easy, marathon, threshold, and interval work. Set them on your watch.
Use the right plan template
The half-marathon training plan is the structured option. Twelve weeks, three blocks, with hill and threshold work built in. If you'd rather have the plan generated for your specific race date, the STRIDD plan generator takes 90 seconds.
Step 5: Train for Pune's December weather
December in Pune is generous: 12-25 degrees, low humidity, clear skies. The weather rewards your training; it does not punish you.
What to wear
A wicking tee, shorts or three-quarter tights, light socks, a cap, sunglasses. Lightweight gloves if you run cold. No need for thermal layers. Test the exact race-day outfit on at least one cool training morning.
Hydration and fuel
Train with the same hydration and fuel routine you'll use on race day. From week 4, take a gel at km 8 and another at km 15 on long runs. Drink 150-200 ml every 4 km. The running in Indian heat and monsoon guide covers the broader protocol; December in Pune is mild, so adjust downward but don't skip electrolytes entirely.
Step 6: Engineer race week
Race week is about subtraction, not addition. Reduce volume, increase sleep, eat familiar food, drink steadily.
Sunday before race day
Do a 60-90 minute easy run with three race-pace pickups of 1 km each. This is your last quality session.
Monday to Thursday
Easy 30-45 minute runs on Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Rest Tuesday. Sleep at least 7 hours each night. Hydrate to clear-yellow urine. Eat balanced, familiar meals.
Friday
Rest. Pack kit. Lay it out in the order you'll put it on. Charge watch. Set two alarms on two devices.
Saturday
Easy 20-minute jog with two 30-second pickups. Eat the biggest carb meal at lunch — Maharashtrian thali with bhakri, rice, dal, and a sabzi works. Hydrate steadily through the afternoon. Sleep early.
Race morning
Wake 2.5 hours before flag-off. Drink 300 ml of water with electrolytes. Eat your standard breakfast. Visit the toilet. Move to the start 35 minutes early. Five-minute jog with three 20-second pickups. Sip 150 ml more water 20 minutes before flag-off, then stop.
Step 7: Run the race
Start at goal pace plus 5-10 seconds per km. Settle into goal pace by km 5. Hold goal pace from km 5 to km 16. Race the last 5 km if the legs allow. Walk through aid stations; don't run them.
The Pune Running Beyond Myself half is a course that rewards even pacing and patient climbing. If you trained the hills and the threshold, the medal is yours. If you start too fast, the foothills will remember.
After the line, walk for ten minutes, drink 500 ml, eat real food within an hour, and log three lines in your phone about what worked and what didn't. Then read the Running Lab archive for recovery and rebuild guides. The half is done. The next plan starts when you're ready.