First Trail (Discovery) — Training Plan
An effort-based, vertical-aware plan — built around terrain, climbs and fuelling, not flat-road pace. Coach Leo adapts it to your real data and how you feel.
Duration
10 weeks
Peak volume
25–40 km
Runs / week
3–4
Long run
1.5–2.5 h
TL;DR
Train for a First Trail (Discovery) (10–21 km) over 10 weeks: peak 25–40 km/week, long run up to 1.5–2.5 h, by effort (HR/RPE) not pace. Scale the vertical work to your race's profile. Learn to power-hike the climbs and relax on the descents — terrain skills matter more than speed.
Are you ready for this distance?
| Prerequisite | You can run 45–60 minutes continuously on flat ground. |
| Profile | Discovery — first trail |
| Typical finish | ~1h to 2h30 depending on terrain |
Not all trails are mountainous
Trail elevation varies enormously — from near-flat forest and coastal trails to big alpine vert. The figures here are typical for a mountain-profile race; a flat or rolling trail of the same distance has far less. Scale the vertical work to YOUR race: flat → focus on terrain, surface and distance; mountainous → train the climbs and descents. The effort-based approach below works on any profile.
For reference, a mountain race at this distance: ~300–800 m of climbing (and ~400–900 m/week at peak). On a flat trail, far less.
Train by effort, not pace
As soon as a trail climbs, pace lies — a steep climb at the same effort can be 3× slower than the flat. Train and race by effort (HR/RPE), and power-hike steep climbs to hold it. On flat or rolling trails effort and pace stay closer, but surface and technicality still matter. These are the zones used throughout this plan.
| Zone | RPE | Feel |
|---|---|---|
| Recovery | 1–2 | Very easy, fully conversational, flat or gentle. |
| Aerobic base | 3–4 | Easy, nose-breathing pace; power-hike climbs to hold effort. |
| Steady / Tempo | 5–6 | Comfortably hard, controlled breathing; race effort for long ultras. |
| Threshold | 7–8 | Hard, short sentences only; climbing intervals. |
| VO2 / Hills | 9–10 | Very hard, max climbs and strides; small dose. |
How the plan is structured
Four phases build terrain durability progressively: base → strength → race-specific big blocks → taper. Where the course has vertical, climbing volume ramps alongside distance.
Base
Easy aerobic volume on rolling terrain; build the weekly rhythm and ankle/foot resilience.
Climb strength
Add hill repeats and sustained climbs; introduce technical descents at controlled effort.
Race-specific peak
Biggest blocks: long runs and back-to-backs on race-like terrain, fuelling rehearsed, vertical at peak.
Taper
Cut volume sharply, keep a little intensity and vertical; arrive fresh and confident.
The key trail sessions
Climb repeats / vertical
Repeated sustained climbs (e.g. 5–8 × 3–5 min uphill) at threshold effort, easy down. Builds the climbing engine and power-hike transition.
Long run & back-to-backs
The cornerstone. Time on feet on race-like terrain at easy effort; for ultras, run long again the next day on tired legs to build durability.
Downhill technique
Dedicated descent practice: quick feet, relaxed upper body, eyes ahead. Eccentric load protects quads on race day — train it, don't just survive it.
Week-by-week plan
Every session, day by day. Expand a week to see it. Paces and durations are guidance — Coach Leo fine-tunes them to your real data and how you feel.
Climbing sessions assume a race with vertical. On a flat or rolling trail, run them as rolling tempo and focus on terrain and distance instead.
Base · Week 1~2.5h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Fri | Easy | 50 min easy, Zone 2 (RPE 3–4) — power-hike any climb to hold effort |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 1h on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Base · Week 2~3h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Fri | Easy | 50 min easy, Zone 2 (RPE 3–4) — power-hike any climb to hold effort |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 1h30 on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Base · Week 3~3h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Fri | Easy | 50 min easy, Zone 2 (RPE 3–4) — power-hike any climb to hold effort |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 1h30 on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Build · Week 4deload (recovery week)~2.3h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Hills | 6–8 × 2–3 min hard uphill (Zone 4, RPE 7–8), jog/walk down — on a flat race, run as rolling tempo |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Tempo | 35 min steady, Zone 3 (RPE 5–6) on rolling terrain — race effort for long ultras |
| Fri | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 1h on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Build · Week 5~3.3h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Hills | 6–8 × 2–3 min hard uphill (Zone 4, RPE 7–8), jog/walk down — on a flat race, run as rolling tempo |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Tempo | 35 min steady, Zone 3 (RPE 5–6) on rolling terrain — race effort for long ultras |
| Fri | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 2h on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Build · Week 6~3.3h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Hills | 6–8 × 2–3 min hard uphill (Zone 4, RPE 7–8), jog/walk down — on a flat race, run as rolling tempo |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Tempo | 35 min steady, Zone 3 (RPE 5–6) on rolling terrain — race effort for long ultras |
| Fri | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 2h on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Peak · Week 7~3.6h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Hills | 6–8 × 2–3 min hard uphill (Zone 4, RPE 7–8), jog/walk down — on a flat race, run as rolling tempo |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Downhill | 50 min with 4–6 controlled descents — quick feet, relaxed, protect the quads |
| Fri | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 2h on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Peak · Week 8~4.1h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Hills | 6–8 × 2–3 min hard uphill (Zone 4, RPE 7–8), jog/walk down — on a flat race, run as rolling tempo |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Downhill | 50 min with 4–6 controlled descents — quick feet, relaxed, protect the quads |
| Fri | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 2h30 on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Peak · Week 9~4.1h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Hills | 6–8 × 2–3 min hard uphill (Zone 4, RPE 7–8), jog/walk down — on a flat race, run as rolling tempo |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Downhill | 50 min with 4–6 controlled descents — quick feet, relaxed, protect the quads |
| Fri | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | 2h30 on race-like terrain, Zone 2 — rehearse fuelling |
Taper · Week 10~2.1h
| Mon | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Tue | Tempo | 25 min steady, Zone 3 (RPE 5–6) on rolling terrain — race effort for long ultras |
| Wed | Recovery | 40 min very easy, Zone 1 (RPE 1–2), or rest |
| Thu | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Fri | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sat | Rest | Full rest or cross-training |
| Sun | Long | Goal race — run by effort, power-hike the climbs, eat early and often. |
Race-day fuelling
Under 2 hours: water and electrolytes are usually enough; practise drinking on the move and one gel if you feel low.
Common mistakes on this distance
- 1.Running easy days too hard on hills. Power-hike to hold easy effort — chasing pace uphill spikes fatigue with no aerobic gain.
- 2.Neglecting descents. Untrained quads blow up on race-day downhills; schedule descent-specific work.
- 3.Never practising fuelling. Your gut is trainable — rehearse race nutrition on long runs, not on race day.
- 4.Chasing flat-road volume. On hilly trails, weekly vertical gain matters as much as kilometres — track both.
- 5.Skipping the taper. Vertical training is brutally fatiguing; arrive recovered, not 'fit but wrecked'.
Frequently asked questions
How many weeks to train for a First Trail (Discovery)?
This plan runs 10 weeks across 4 phases (base, climb strength, race-specific peak, taper), on 3–4 runs/week.
What weekly volume and vertical gain?
Peak 25–40 km/week and 400–900 m of climbing/week. On trail, vertical matters as much as distance.
What level should I be before starting?
You can run 45–60 minutes continuously on flat ground.
How do I handle fuelling?
Under 2 hours: water and electrolytes are usually enough; practise drinking on the move and one gel if you feel low.
How long is the longest run?
Up to 1.5–2.5 h — measured by time, not distance, because terrain changes everything.
How is this different from a generic plan?
This page is the framework. Coach Leo's version adapts every session to your Strava data, your terrain, your fatigue and your injury history — and remembers it all week to week.
Sources & methodology
This plan synthesizes the leading ultra-running references, then adapts them to your real training:
- Bryon Powell — Relentless Forward Progress
- David & Megan Roche — Some Work, All Play / The Happy Runner
Not medical advice. Build a long aerobic base before long ultras and consult a sports physician after injury.
Get this plan adapted to you
Generic trail plans don't know your terrain, your fatigue or your last bad descent. Coach Leo remembers your history, your injuries and your home trails — and adjusts every week through conversation.
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