The Border Run: Race Day Checklist & Logistics

The Border Run is a 100K ultra along the road that ends at Wagah. December, dry, cold mornings, hot afternoons, and one of the most charged finish lines a runner in this country can cross. A race like this is not won by what you do on race morning. It is won by what you packed three days before. This checklist is built like a checklist should be — usable, specific, in the order you will need it.

Three days out: the deliberate pack

The mistake most ultra runners make is packing the morning of travel. Three days out gives you time to remember the thing you forgot.

The mandatory list

  • Race shoes, broken in, with at least 60 km on them but no more than 250 km.
  • Backup shoes, in case the primary pair causes a problem in the final 30 km.
  • Socks — three pairs, the brand and model you have trained in.
  • Shorts and singlets — two of each, both tested on long runs.
  • Hydration vest, with bottles you have used on at least four long runs.
  • Headlamp, batteries fresh, plus a spare set.
  • GPS watch, charger, and a backup charge cable.
  • Race fuel — gels, dates, salt tabs, in quantities that exceed what you think you need by 30 percent.
  • Anti-chafe — petroleum jelly, body glide, or the equivalent.
  • Buff or cap — December dust along the border road is real.
  • Layers — a long-sleeve technical top, a windproof shell, gloves for the pre-dawn start.

Two days out: travel and arrival

Land in Amritsar by Thursday for a Saturday race. The drive to Wagah is short. The mental load of last-minute travel is not.

The arrival checklist

  • Confirm bib pickup window from the race page.
  • Drive or recce the first 10 km of the course in daylight.
  • Locate aid stations from the race briefing.
  • Identify drop-bag locations and pack each bag.
  • Eat your tested race-morning breakfast Friday to confirm it sits well.

One day out: the deliberate rest

The day before a 100K is not a training day. It is not a sightseeing day. It is a logistics day.

Walk for fifteen minutes in the morning. Eat your two main meals before 4 pm. Hydrate to clear urine by 6 pm. Lay out kit. Read the route. Visualise the night start. Sleep by 9 pm.

The hydration math

500 ml of fluid with electrolytes in the morning. Another 500 ml at lunch. A litre across the afternoon and evening. The STRIDD heat and monsoon guide covers electrolyte ratios that work across Indian race environments, including the dry cold of Wagah.

Race morning: the four-thirty start

Most ultras at this distance start in the dark. The Border Run is no exception. Cold, dry, and the kind of pre-dawn quiet that you remember decades later.

The morning protocol

  1. Wake 2.5 to 3 hours before start.
  2. Eat your tested breakfast — oats, banana, peanut butter, dates, or whatever you have rehearsed on long runs.
  3. 200 to 300 ml of fluid with electrolytes 90 minutes out.
  4. Apply anti-chafe everywhere it might matter. Feet, thighs, underarms, nipples.
  5. Pin bib, attach timing chip, lace shoes deliberately.
  6. Final bathroom stop 30 minutes before the start.
  7. Warm-up — five minutes of walking, three minutes of easy jog, no faster.
  8. 500 ml of fluid sipped from 60 minutes out.

The first 30 km: the bank

The first thirty kilometres of a 100K are where the race is won by not racing. The temptation is to settle into a faster pace than your finish target. The math is unforgiving.

Run at 90 to 92 percent of your goal average pace. Walk every aid station — eat there, drink there, do not eat on the move in the first three hours. This is the deposit. The afternoon will withdraw.

The fuelling rhythm

One gel or solid carb every 35 to 40 minutes from kilometre 5. 600 to 800 ml fluid per hour. The STRIDD calculators can give you the calorie and fluid target based on your weight and target time.

The middle 40 km: the long haul

Kilometres 30 to 70 are where most ultras are lost. The body is tiring. The novelty is gone. The afternoon heat starts to bite even in December.

Slow your pace by ten seconds per kilometre. Walk one minute out of every fifteen. Eat at every aid station whether you feel hungry or not. Cool your head with water at every chance. Survive this stretch and you have a race.

The final 30 km: the long road home

The closing thirty kilometres of the Border Run carry the weight of the geography. The Wagah road is straight, the sun starts to drop, and the finish line begins to feel real.

Hold your pace steady. Walk for two minutes after every gel. Talk to other runners. Smile at supporters. The last hour is where the race is run and where the memory is built.

Crossing the finish: the small story

I remember a runner — a friend's coach, in fact — finishing a 100K in another part of the country and sitting on the kerb for twenty minutes before he could speak. He said the same thing every ultra finisher eventually says. I will never do this again. Until I do.

The Border Run finish line is one of the more charged ones in Indian running. Plan to be there long enough to feel it.

Next step

If you have not yet built your training plan, open the STRIDD ultramarathon plan or generate one shaped to your week using the plan generator. For more guides on Indian ultras, race-week logistics, and recovery, the STRIDD Running Lab archive is built for runners like you.

Frequently asked questions

How early should I arrive in Amritsar for The Border Run?

Land by Thursday for a Saturday race. The drive to Wagah is short, but the mental load of last-minute travel is not. Two full days before the start gives you time to pick up your bib, scout the first ten kilometres of the course, lock your drop-bag logistics, and eat your tested breakfast on Friday morning to confirm it sits well. A travel day stacked onto race day costs you in the final 30 km.

What is the most commonly forgotten item on a 100K packing list?

Anti-chafe and spare batteries for the headlamp. Both are cheap, both are unforgivable to forget. Anti-chafe goes on feet, thighs, underarms, and nipples before the start and reapplied at the 50 km mark. A pre-dawn start needs the headlamp for the first hour and possibly the last hour if your finish stretches into evening. Always carry a spare battery set.

How should I pace the first 30 km of a 100K?

Run at 90 to 92 percent of your goal average pace. Walk every aid station — eat there, drink there, do not eat on the move in the first three hours. This is the deposit. The afternoon will withdraw. Most ultras at this distance are lost in the first 30 km by runners who started too fast and could not absorb the cost across the next 70.

What is the fuelling target for a 100K?

One gel or solid carb every 35 to 40 minutes from kilometre 5. 600 to 800 ml fluid per hour with electrolytes. Total calories across the race should be in the 2,500 to 4,000 range depending on body weight and pace. Use the STRIDD calculators to dial this in. Skipping food in the first three hours is the most common cause of late-race blow-up.

How do I handle the middle 40 km when most runners struggle?

Slow your pace by ten seconds per kilometre between kilometres 30 and 70. Walk one minute out of every fifteen. Eat at every aid station whether you feel hungry or not. Cool your head with water at every chance. The middle of an ultra is where positions in the field are reshuffled, mostly by runners not falling apart rather than by anyone going faster.

What is the right mindset for the final 30 km?

Hold pace steady. Walk for two minutes after every gel. Talk to other runners. Smile at supporters. The last hour is where the race is run and where the memory is built. The Wagah road is straight and the geography carries weight. Plan to be at the finish line long enough to feel it once you cross.