There is a kind of August in Manali that doesn't look like August anywhere else in India. The light comes in long sheets across Solang Valley, the deodars sway, and somewhere up the ridge a tribe of runners is putting on shoes that will, in the next hours, do something humans did not used to do; climb vertically, fast, on legs that should be still recovering. The Solang SkyUltra is not a race so much as a question the mountains ask politely.
What skyrunning asks of you
Skyrunning, as a sport, was born in the European Alps in the early nineties. The rules are simple and ruthless: go vertical, go fast, go light. Solang's version of it sits in the Pir Panjal and the lower Himalayas, and August is monsoon-fringe, when the valley is greenest and the weather is least predictable.
An altitude truth
At elevation, your oxygen budget shrinks and your perceived effort grows. The body becomes a slower, more honest accountant. You cannot trick the math; you can only meet it on its terms.
A weather truth
Late monsoon in the Himalayas can deliver a still morning and a stormy afternoon. The race-day checklist is not a list of things you might need. It is a list of things you will need.
The night before, the kind that matters
I think a lot about a night a coach of mine described in Chamonix in 2015. He drank weak chai, ate plain dal-chawal, packed his vest twice, and went to bed early enough that he heard the kitchen close. That's the model. Race-eve is not the day for new dishes, new gear, or new ideas.
Sleep
Bank sleep from Wednesday. Tomorrow night will be a poor one; that's a given. The deposit was made earlier in the week.
Food
Simple, familiar, mostly carbs. Skip the trekking-style heavy meals.
Kit
Lay out your race kit and a mirror copy in your drop bag. Manali nights can drop into single digits even in August's tail end; bring layers you can carry without resentment.
The mandatory and earned kit list
Sky races publish mandatory kit because they have buried runners who treated it as optional. Take it seriously.
What you wear
- Trail shoes with aggressive grip. Wet rock at altitude is a different physics.
- Hydration vest, 1.5 to 2 litres capacity, tested on a long mountain run.
- Lightweight rain shell rated for monsoon-fringe weather.
- Cap, sunglasses, buff. Mountain sun under thin air burns faster than coastal sun.
- Headlamp plus spare cells. Pre-dawn starts and late finishes are skyrunning normal.
- Whistle, foil blanket, first-aid pouch if mandated.
What you carry
- Salt capsules or chews, 30 to 60 grams of carbs per hour.
- Phone with offline maps and emergency numbers saved.
- Small cash, ID, and a printed bib confirmation.
- Light gloves if the weather forecast hints at a cold wind on the ridge.
For the broader climate logic, see the heat and monsoon guide; even cold-mountain runs share principles with hot-weather hydration logic.
The morning of the race
I once watched a friend miss the start of a small Garhwal ultra because his alarm phone, which had been switched off in flight mode, had not switched back on. He carried that lesson to every race after. Set two alarms. Place one on the other side of the room.
Three hours before
Drink water with a pinch of salt. Eat 80 to 100 g of carbs you've trained with: parathas without oil, oats, idli, or toast with banana. Sit, don't pace.
One hour before
Walk to the start area. Drop your bag. Walk-jog for ten minutes, then dynamic mobility. The deodar-scented cold can mask warm-up gaps; do not skip them.
Fifteen minutes before
Mouth rinses only. One gel if you've trained with it. Locate the pen that matches your honest goal; line up there.
On-course discipline
Skyrunning rewards the runner who lets the mountain set the pace.
Climbs
Power-hike anything steeper than 15 percent. Save your running legs for the runnable sections; you'll need them on the descents.
Ridges
Move with rhythm. Eat to the clock, every 25 to 30 minutes. Salt every hour. Drink before you're thirsty; thirst in cold mountain air is a late signal.
Descents
Run them within your skill, not beyond it. Quick small steps; soft knees; eyes ten metres ahead, not on your toes. A blown quad on a descent ends races faster than a missed cutoff.
One small story
I once asked a Tibetan-Indian runner from Mcleodganj how he ran so well on descents. He shrugged and said his grandfather had taught him to walk down stairs without making noise. The lesson, he said, was the same: soft, fast, alert. Skyrunning often borrows from older skills than its name suggests.
After the finish
The descent into Solang's finish area is, on a good day, one of the most beautiful sights in Indian running. Treat it as a doorway, not a stage.
First hour
- Walk for ten minutes. Change into dry layers.
- Eat 30 to 60 g of carbs plus protein within 60 minutes.
- Hydrate slowly with 500 to 1,000 ml plus salt.
The next day
Sleep in. Walk slowly. Do not even think about a recovery run for at least three to five days. Most skyrunners over-recover for one week and under-train the next two; flip that ratio.
The next step
If you've read this far, you're already pacing the day in your head. Now do the rest of the work. Open the Solang SkyUltra event page, browse the ultramarathon plans, then sit with the plan generator. The calculators will help you stress-test pace; the rest of STRIDD Running Lab will keep you company in the months before August.