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Ultra-running twelve-week — tea-supported

Twelve weeks of structured ultra-running preparation — building aerobic base, adding speed, tapering — paired with a progressive Chinese tea ritual. Pre-run cold-brews sustain focus, post-long-run whites aid recovery, and race-week yellows settle the mind. Curated by senior tea expert Chen Hui Yi. A performance-informed practice.

Duration
12 weeks
Starts
2026-09-15
Seats
16
From
€420
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How tea underpins each training phase

Ultra-running is a conversation with discomfort — not a short argument. It demands a nervous system that stays curious under load, a gut that processes fuel at race pace, and a recovery window that repairs tissue before the next session erodes it again. Chinese tea slides into each of these gaps with a quiet precision that sports nutrition often overlooks. This twelve-week cohort isn’t a clinical trial; it’s a guided experiment in pairing periodised running with periodised tea. You’ll move through three blocks: aerobic foundation, specific endurance, and taper — each with its own tea selections, brewing methods, and performance rationale.

During the base-building weeks (1–4) the body learns to burn fat steadily. Teas like Bái Háo Yín Zhēn (白毫银针) and Mèng Dǐng Huáng Yá (蒙顶黄芽) arrive early. Their caffeine is wrapped in L-theanine, which tea.energy’s time-series data shows promotes relaxed alertness — the mental state you want on a four-hour Zone 2 run. We teach cold-brew extraction from day one: a technique that draws out amino acids while leaving bitter tannins behind, producing a smooth intra-run fluid that doubles as a low-sugar electrolyte vehicle.

The intensity block (weeks 5–8) pulls you up towards lactate threshold and VO2 max intervals. Here we turn to more astringent leaves: a 2018 Lǎo Shēng Pǔ’ěr (老生普洱) that tea.doctor’s antioxidant assays link to accelerated post-exertion muscle enzyme clearance, and Zhèng Shān Xiǎo Zhǒng (正山小种), whose gentle smokiness masks a potent anti-inflammatory punch. You’ll brew small gongfu doses before speed sessions — 8 g of leaf, flash steeped — to deliver a focused, sustained lift that won’t scatter your legs like a high-dose pre-workout powder. On recovery days, hot Shòu Méi (寿眉) becomes a post-run ritual, its higher polysaccharide content helping to reboot gut motility after the systemic stress of a 30 km trail effort.

The taper phase (weeks 9–12) is where most athletes unravel. Adrenaline drops, phantom niggles appear, sleep fragments. The tea program shifts to predominantly white and yellow teas — Bái Mǔ Dān (白牡丹) and Jūn Shān Yín Zhēn (君山银针) — whose delicate profiles soothe an overaroused nervous system without sharpening caffeine anxiety. In the final race week, we introduce a short, room-temperature infusion of Chén Nián Shú Pǔ’ěr (陈年熟普洱) each evening; its fermented warmth signals the vagus nerve to downshift, a practice our colleagues at tea.yoga have mapped alongside restorative nāḍī śodhana breathing.

Every week includes a live 30-minute online call with senior tea expert Chen Hui Yi, who will walk you through the tea of the week — its provenance, its processing, and its precise place in your training microcycle. You’ll also join a private channel on tea.community, where the cohort shares field notes, adjustments, and the inevitable hilarity of trying to cold-brew in a start-line corral. Teas are sourced through shop.thetea.app and delivered in three tranches, while cold-brew gear guidance lives on tea.equipment. The programme assumes you already own a training plan; we provide the tea overlay that makes it stickier, calmer, and — if the data agrees — faster.

Week by week

What’s included