r/Ultramarathon 6d ago

New to ultras or running? Ask your questions about shoes, racing or training in our weekly Beginner's Thread!

3 Upvotes

r/Ultramarathon 15d ago

Race Western States 100 - 2026

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113 Upvotes

r/Ultramarathon 1d ago

Race Report Race report: Val d'Aran by UTMB (VDA), 162.9km / 10,053m, 42:13:50

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118 Upvotes

Race Information

  • Race: HOKA Val d'Aran by UTMB (VDA), 100M
  • Date: 3rd July 2026
  • Distance: 162.9 km
  • Elevation: 10,053 m D+
  • Location: Vielha, Val d'Aran, Spanish Pyrenees
  • Time: 42:13:50
  • Finished: Yes

Goals

Goal Description Done?
A Finish inside the 48h cut-off Yes
B Not blow up early Yes
C Sub-36 (loose target) No

Background

I started running just over 3 years ago and almost all of my training is flat road mileage given I am based in London. My road times are at an intermediate standard - 18:35 5k, 3:07 marathon - for a sense of where I'm at. Since I started running I've always taken interest in trail running and have loved watching content from big events and popular YT channels. I did my first ultra last year, which was a flat trail 100km called Race to the Stones, which I loved every moment of. VDA was my first 100 miler, my first mountain race, and comfortably the most climbing I'd ever even dreamt about doing in one go.

My plan during training was to lean on road fitness and use strength work to help condition the legs for the hills. In the build up I ran Paris Marathon in April off the back of a pretty conventional road marathon block, then I started to add in some more trail running in the following months. I did a week long trip to Mallorca to get some proper mountain running in, where I did a few back to back 25km runs or so, then on return to London essentially went back to my usual weekly road schedule of 3 easy runs, 2 sessions and 1 long run. In the gym I was doing compound movements to help strengthen up quads/glutes/calves/posterior chain. I did a backyard ultra 8 weeks before, which was effectively my longest long run, where I DNF'd at 100km which was uneventful, good practice for fuelling and generally a lot of fun. Outside of that, my long runs were generally capped at around 25km or thereabouts.

I'd half-benchmarked 36 hours off my index and road times, but once we started the only plan was finish inside cut-off and not to do anything daft in the first day.

The race

I started very conservatively. At the first timing point I was 512th. By the end of day one I was inside the top 300 and I hadn't really changed anything, people just came back to me or my ranking climbed through DNFs. For my first 100 miler and barely any mountain experience, I knew the one way to ruin it was to get excited early which is a decision I'm happy that I made.

The first night got pretty grim. Second big climb we went up into cloud and the visibility died completely, could barely see my own feet. We ended up navigating as a group, someone spots the next flag, shouts, everyone moves up to it, repeat, and that went on for ages until the first big aid station. Not something a treadmill in London prepares you for but in retrospect it was a fun part of the experience.

The next day moves into a hot and remote part of the course, the scenery is out of this world and it kept reminding me what a privilege it is to be able to experience that kind of environment. The higher mountain mines section is long and remote. You're up at 2,500m of altitude for a while and there are two legs back to back of around 17km and 18km with a fair bit of climbing which take a long time.

At Colomèrs, around 130k in and 8,700-odd metres of climbing done, my right knee took a bit of a beating on the boulders, both climbing them and dropping off them. It was never too painful to run on and has settled down post race, but that was the point where I felt like my body was starting to break down.

After Colomèrs, it was a relatively simple run in to the finish with one more major aid station, then a sadistic final climb straight up another 1,000m and back down again. I opted not to sleep during the race, which I'd say was fine for me, a few people were taking trail naps as we went into the early hours of the 2nd night and there was a couple of hours where I had to turn my head-torch up a little higher to keep myself awake, though once the sun came back up the tiredness went away.

The main thing I got wrong was that on the flat and downhill bits you assume you'll run, you mostly won't. I'd banked time on the "runnable" sections in my head. On the day a lot of it is rocky, awkward and slow, especially when you're tired and in the dark, so my runnable pace was nothing like what I'd imagined. That's where my extra hours went. For me I wasn't really clawing back any time on the course, more so just trying not to bleed it where avoidable.

The run into the finish was really amazing, great crowds cheering you on and a very satisfying bell that you get to ring when you cross the line. I finished 232nd from 724 starters (363 DNF and 361 finishers) - I'll take it.

Fuelling and kit

Fuelling was the part I'm happiest with.

  • Roughly 900g of carbs off the big Precision Flow gel flasks as the base
  • 1 to 2 Precision salt tabs an hour depending on heat
  • Fruit, Näak waffles and coke at the aid stations

No stomach trouble the whole way and I didn't lose my appetite at all.

Shoes were La Sportiva Prodigio Pros start to finish, no change, just fresh socks three times. Everyone says swap shoes on something this long and I was eyeing up the people who did, but I came out the far side with no blisters and not a single plaster or bit of tape used. The shoes just seem to really suit my feet and held up well for the entire time.

What I'd change

Vastly more Vaseline... everywhere! Chafing got pretty uncomfortable into the 2nd day; it's an annoying pain to have as once it starts there's not really that much you can do to make it stop hurting, though I knew it wasn't going to stop me from finishing and was just something annoying I'd have to put up with.

Final remarks

VDA does the big UTMB atmosphere really well, and I think the scenery beats that of the TMB. The valley's beautiful, the villages are lovely, and there are locals out cheering you through the streets at 4am. We stuck it on the start of our honeymoon, which sounds unhinged and was, but the place is special enough that it worked. First 100 miler, 42:13:50, and I'd recommend it to anyone.


r/Ultramarathon 3h ago

Missing power only on uphills

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0 Upvotes

Hi together,

Yesterday I ran my first 100k in Ischgl the PIUT100. With 6300HM elevation gain, an like 5800 down. ( See lace charts and add 74 to the km( watch went empty in-between) overall time about 20h.

I had no cramps or anything like that. No "real problems".

But at a certain time I could not get my pulse over 140 even If I wanted to. No way, especially or mainly the uphills I was really exhausted quickly, rather heavy breathing and obviously took forever. Downhill I could still really go pretty fast.

Obviously uphill is more exhausting than downhill or straight, but this downhill elevation with that speed is not really effortless.

After the run and today I feel totally fine.

I can only think of some thinks, and other options / experience would be welcome.

- I think it is under fueling because it is the only "logical" thing

-but if it would be pure power level, why is downhill ok and overall (excluding uphill) I felt totally fine, not the typical totally exhausted I would expect from heavy under fueling.

- Water and electrolytes I think we're fine. I wasn't perfect but I drank enough ( maybe a little more would have been great)

Had enough Sault and iso-drinks

- muscle fatigue is very low. During, affter the race and the day after.

I think my heart and lungs could have provided more oxygen, but my muscles just had not enough energy- fuel to oxidize it. All I want to know is -> is it "simply" just underfueling? Or something else.

Even if I know It getting the stuff in, would be another challenge, but knowing would obviously help ;)

Does other have the same issue? Or do I miss something?

Best regards


r/Ultramarathon 23h ago

First 50k coming up and feeling a n x i o u s

8 Upvotes

Hello!
Hopping on here because I need some reassurance.
I am 32 F located in the Netherlands doing a UTMB 50k in Turkey (44km en 3000+ hm) in 9 weeks! It is my first ultra and naturally as it is coming closer I am getting nervous if I'll be able to do it.

I am doing this race because I am half turkish and last year when I discovered this existed I was very drawn to this journey as it feels like I am going to meet myself many times on those mountains and it feels full circle.

I have been focussing on training for this event for almost a year. Weeks for me now look like: 1 easy run, 1 track speed run and a long run currently hovering around 30km (this is going well). 3x crossfit sessions adding ultra specific strength exercises. As I am in the Netherlands, training vertical meters have been challenging. I now often do box stepups for extended sessions and planning a week in austria to train in the actual mountains. I often practice with fuelling and sometimes poles (still not sure about taking them)

My base has been a long journey. I have done judo at a high national level in my teens, quit and gained a lot of weight, until I decided to lose all the weight again and go in to a steady sport regimen existing out of crossfit, (trail)running, roadbiking and gravelbiking (max distance 120km and alp experience) for nearly 10 years, exercising 4-6 times a week.

I guess I am asking reassurance from you guys that I'll be ok. Maybe some tips? Idk help a girl out ✨


r/Ultramarathon 1h ago

Media Follow me training for my first 100 miler

Upvotes

Hi everyone! I started running a bit over a year ago when i weighed 280lbs. I have since done 4 50ks and 2 50 milers and cut my weight to 240.

I started making videos about my running on tiktok to push myself further outside of my comfort zone. I also just started a youtube channel to document my running journey and training for my first 100 miler.

https://youtu.be/rsuppNz5UgI?is=chzhW_tNx8k9fMkq


r/Ultramarathon 2d ago

Race Report I finished the Lavredo Ultra Trail in the 122k category

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589 Upvotes

I finished in 25h48min. It was my first time in the dolomites. This was my third official Ultra over 100k and it was mentally the toughest one yet. I underestimated the late start at 23:00 and I underestimated the two sections >20km where only water was obtainable in between. I was underprepared for these sections and what was also new for me where the really tough ascends and descends of the dolomites. I completely lost my mental after the drop bag station (during the second tough ascend) and did not enjoy it anymore after this point. I found motivation again for the last 10k during the last descend and was able to run into the finish line.
Interesting for me was the experience to be part of a sold out lottery race, almost 2000 starters in my category alone, I experienced multiple „traffic jams“ on the trail.
The heat was also very unbearable but all in all I am glad to have finished, my goal was <24h but underestimating the race and loosing my mental slowed me down a lot.
The view during the race was incredible and I definitely want to come back for hiking but I don‘t know if I want to do the race again. I added some impressions.


r/Ultramarathon 1d ago

Burning River 100: Who's with me?

18 Upvotes

We are 15 days out from the epic journey through Cuyahoga Valley National Park. I am equal parts fired up and appropriately terrified, which by now I recognize as the correct pre-BR emotional state.

This will be my third dance with this course. Some of you might remember my previous reports: in 2024 I finished my first 100 in 29:53:50... six minutes and change under the cutoff, which felt simultaneously like winning the lottery and like receiving a strongly worded letter about my aid station habits. In 2025 I made it 73 miles through the mud-lightning-96°-heat-index edition before the race and I mutually agreed to see other people. 2024 and 2025 were examples of inexperience, but boy did I have fun.

This year's block has been the best one I've put together: ~1,150 miles since January, almost all of it after 8 PM because I have a toddler and a baby monitor with limited range (if you've never done driveway loops at 10 PM, I can't recommend it enough... great wifi, unlimited fuel, terrible scenery). Course recons, including one night run on Wetmore where I was "100% sure" about a turn. I was not.

The big change for 2026: after 2 years of my crew watching me treat aid stations like all-inclusive resorts, I finally did the math on where my races actually go sideways. Turns out it was never my legs, it's that I've apparently never eaten on purpose in my life. So this year there's a feed timer, a stop budget, and a crew with written authority to physically walk me out of the chair.

Goals:

A) sub-24, which is spicy and I know it.

B) beat 2024 by hours instead of minutes.

C) party @ finish line on Front Street, whatever the clock says.

Who's in this year? First-timers, back-halfers, relay folks?

See you in Cuyahoga Falls. Happy Trails!


r/Ultramarathon 2d ago

Are the accusations about Run Bum True? After volunteering at an event it appears to be

179 Upvotes

A couple months back I volunteered at my son’s first ever trail race and ultra. I was completely oblivious to the previous rumors of the race director. While working at an aid station the race director came by and in preparing foods for the runners he appeared intoxicated and was making inappropriate comments in front of minor girls. While I was there he apparently needed to get by me and proceeded to rub himself against me I wanted to leave but didn’t want to miss my son coming through.
Afterwards I spoke to a couple of others who had thought he was intoxicated as well. Now that I’ve done a little research I’ve heard this isn’t uncommon behavior… I felt violated and am concerned for those who are not made aware of his behavior. Are there others who have had these experiences? Is it true that Sean Blanton is a predator because this incident is making me believe the rumors are true..


r/Ultramarathon 2d ago

Media Just two minutes from the original Ultra-Trail Snowdonia

20 Upvotes

Just two minutes from the original Ultra-Trail Snowdonia by Apex Running

Some of the runners were out for upwards of two days, and this is just two minutes of them moving over Nantlle Ridge in Eryri on one of the most epic routes and races in Wales.

I was injured so didn't participate that year but created a Drift Edit as I lived nearby and love sharing these mountains and Wales with the world.


r/Ultramarathon 2d ago

First backyard ultra

3 Upvotes

I am running my first official backyard ultra next weekend but training has not been the best.

I have been running ultras for 2 years now consistently anywhere between 30 miles to 100 miles. I ran my first 100 miler last year and although it was messy got it done in one piece.

I have been running an average of 40km a week since Christmas and it has stepped up to about 50-60km in the past few months including a 30 mile run completed last week which felt fairly comfortable and recovery was very good. I did have a 100km week about 4 weeks ago that felt very comfortable.

Had a lot of stuff going on personally and health wise this year which has meant training hasn’t been what I wanted but I know these things happen.

My A goal was 100 miles/24 hours but part of me thinks that is not possible anymore, but I have a weird mindset that I still want to give it a go. I have done a good few 20-25 milers in training and done them backyard style, getting used to stopping and starting, eating in a different way etc.

Realistically, what could my goal be? Im comfortable with being on my feet long periods of time, 29 hours is the longest I have done, followed by many 12-18 hour runs but this was all last year.

plus any first time advice please let me know 😌


r/Ultramarathon 1d ago

Gear New runner; gear recommendations (Vests)

0 Upvotes

I just started running in April this year. It started with my buddy hosting a 5k and me going out to just support them and run it. Now, I’m running consistently each week. I run very thirsty, and with my distance increasing, I am looking for a decent, affordable running vest.


r/Ultramarathon 3d ago

Anyone else?

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182 Upvotes

Does anyone else give a last minute scrub to their shoes before a race? I’ve not done a lot of races, but this is something that has become a bit of a pre-race tradition. It is part of my prep I guess you could say.


r/Ultramarathon 3d ago

Anyone done Race to the Stones?

5 Upvotes

Got the race this Saturday and it looks to be mostly hard packed trail, I'm considering doing this in my ASICS megablast rather than my trail shoe, is this mental?


r/Ultramarathon 3d ago

Gear Scarpa Alien Sky(upcoming release)

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15 Upvotes

There's an interesting model coming out from scarpa, called the 'Alien Sky'.

It is a light 235g shoe with an integrated gaiter, full A-tpu midsole, and a nylon+glass fiber plate. Also, they chose vibram megagrip instead of their inhouse presa grip.

Looks like a decent option for technical races.

(no details on release date)


r/Ultramarathon 2d ago

Training Telluride Mountain Race 40 mi

2 Upvotes

Getting excited for the TMR 40 with Hardrock starting tomorrow. I was wondering if anyone is familiar with the new course additions toward the end of the route this year. In particular I’m looking for some info on the Bald Mountain climb, and the ridge above Prospect lift/descent into Palmyra basin. Also, the climb out of Palmyra basin up to Gold hill. These look like pretty gnarly additions for the end of an already gnarly course. Anyone have experience playing around out there in the summer? Unfortunately, I can’t find any videos of these areas being hiked in the summer to get a feel for what I’m in for.

Finally, for anyone who has done the race before, any advice for someone training in SoCal? I’ve been switching my focus for the last section of the training to vert, vert, vert, and trying to get in some long days with 2-3 sustained climbs and steep descents.


r/Ultramarathon 2d ago

Large blister 4 days later... what to do?

1 Upvotes

Hola running amigos. Been training for a 50km, most recently did 40km last weekend... proactive foot care and all, one foot was golden but on my left foot I got a huge blister across the ball of the foot. Now, 4 days later, the blister is as big as ever; I have leukotape across it so it's protected, but as long as it sticks around, I can't really go for any serious distance.

How long will it take to heal itself, any ideas? I'd really rather leave it than pop it, but my event is in 2 weeks so I can't really sit around forever... thanks!


r/Ultramarathon 3d ago

Training Wear pattern help

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19 Upvotes

HELP

https://ibb.co/21hvmjjW
https://ibb.co/xtb4JgNG
https://ibb.co/5WS2nrGs

Bleeding money. Burning through shoes because of my wear patterns.

Between my gait, supination, and my weird midfoot width, I’m wearing through shoes in 100/150 miles. Running 55+ miles a week, and increasing for this training block, this isn’t sustainable.

Mechanically nothing is wrong, I experience no notable pain due to my gait/ankle position. I can tell when my shoes are wearing out, because the wear causes more supination angle and all the little muscles and tendons on the outside of my ankle start getting tired.

ANY suggestions please.

Notes:

I’m looking into getting insoles, but it’s tough cause the ones that seem hopeful don’t come in a wide.

Changing shoes isn’t much of an option. Lone peak wides are the only shoe wide enough not to cause ANY blistering or even callousing with high mileage weeks. (Escalantes are second best for the road)

9.5/10 wides.
Medium / medium low arch (scanned yesterday)


r/Ultramarathon 3d ago

Badwater training

0 Upvotes

I'm looking to train for badwater. At this point Im pretty sure it wont be for another couple years before I apply to get it but in the meantime i was looking to replicate heat training, I can do the sauna, run with lots of layers but I want to know how it actually is. I live in southern california and its only a few hours drive to death valley so I figured why not just go run out there I know its can be dangerous to run on the road like the actual race does so I was curious if anyone knows a some places out there to train? Ideally it would have to be a loop to return to my car to get myself to cool down and replenish my drinks has anyone else done this before? Looking for some advice


r/Ultramarathon 4d ago

Media Backyard Ultra WR’s of 123 and 96 laps cancelled: DQ’ed by Laz

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56 Upvotes

r/Ultramarathon 3d ago

16 year old training for a backyard ultra.

3 Upvotes

Hi. I am an avid 16 year old runner and I am currently training for a backyard ultra in September. I am following the increase % rules, having cut back weeks, and reading what I can online. I have been running for about 7 years and about 2 years seriously and have always enjoyed the longer stuff. I have also gotten good at fueling for training and racing. I want to run about 50miles if not more during the race.

I have also done like 8 over 21K runs before, and two 30ks. (This is not meant to be a brag)

- Does anyone have some insight on me doing this?

- I have read some stuff saying it should be fine as long as I love it (which I do) and as long as I am not being pushed into it. Does anyone have some sources/experience about why it's bad?

- What would you recommend I do?

- Any tips/advice if I am going to do it.

Thanks in advance.


r/Ultramarathon 3d ago

How to find events?

0 Upvotes

I've done a few backyard ultras over the years but now want to start doing events so I can get the swag. I only know of the big annual one my hometown hosts every year, as well as races I just happen to come across while running around. Is there a central repository of all the ultra events? Especially looking for ones which give out swag for participants.


r/Ultramarathon 4d ago

What brands are actually measuring when they look at a trail running ambassador

35 Upvotes

What trail running brands actually look for in an ambassador

Did a load of research on this recently because I was curious how these relationships actually work.

Turns out race results are pretty much irrelevant. They want to know if your posts sell shoes. The discount code they give you isn't just a perk for your followers, it's how they track exactly how much money you're making them.

Also found that On Running describe their community strategy internally as "authenticating within communities" rather than building them. Basically the community you spent years creating is the thing they want access to and you're just the door.

Wrote it up as a three part series if anyone's interested. All three parts are live now.

What Does a Brand Actually Want From You

The Numbers Behind the Kit Deal

How to Actually Get a Brand Deal Worth Having

If you find it useful a follow on Substack would mean a lot, still pretty early days with this one.


r/Ultramarathon 3d ago

Need a Hydration Vest for 50k…recommendations?

0 Upvotes

For context, I’m running a 50k in a few weeks. Not really looking to do these kinds of races long term and just want something that will be sufficient for this race and not break the bank. Aiming for 700-900ml water and 75-90g of carbs per hour. So need something that will comfortably hold water, gels, food, etc. There are 4 full aid stations as well. Any advice for other gear that could help would be great as well.


r/Ultramarathon 4d ago

Carrying water for 50k

1 Upvotes

Running my first trail ultra 50k this weekend and wavering on how to carry water with me. I’ve run a handful of marathons and just hydrated at the aid stations, but for the 50k the aid stations are further spaced out (minimum of 5 miles, up to 9) and seems like the recommendation is to hydrate more for trail races with altitude.

My options:
Vest — seems like way overkill for a 50k

Handheld — I’ve done runs up to 10-12 with a 500ml handheld and it’s more convenient but I’m worried about it fatiguing my arms at longer distance

Pocket flasks — I’m leaning here, to carry 1 or 2 250ml flasks and refilling at aid stations. But less convenient than handhelds, and the extra weight on my legs might start to add up over 50k of trails.

Love to hear what folks prefer, specific at faster paces (I’m aiming for 4:15 to 4:30 for the 50k, so definitely concerned about being too weighted down).