2026-05-24 · 4 min read
Power hiking on trail — when walking is faster than running
On a trail with real climbs, there's a point where running stops making sense and walking is objectively faster. If you never trained it, you're probably losing time every time the slope tilts up. Here's the detail on when, why, and how.
The mathematical threshold
There's a point where the metabolic cost of running becomes higher than walking at the same ascending speed. For an amateur athlete, that crossover typically happens between 15-20% grade.
Below 15% (most rolling singletrack): easy running is more efficient.
Between 15-25%: depends on the athlete and the moment of the race.
Above 25%: hard walking always wins.
The classic mistake of the road runner doing their first ultra trail: pushes to run everything. Result: quads fried by mile 16, pace collapses, second half forced to walk.
How power hiking is trained
Power hiking isn't "walking." It's walking with specific technique:
1. Short steps (not a long stride). Relatively high foot cadence, ~110-130 steps/min.
2. Hands on thighs or poles (key). On climbs >20%, hands resting on quads just above the knee transfer force from arms and back — they take load off the leg alone.
3. Trunk leaning forward from the hip, not hunched from the back. You keep your gaze forward, not at the ground.
4. Rhythmic breathing tied to the step: typically 2 steps inhale, 2 steps exhale at moderate effort.
5. Gear change on transitions: when the slope drops, don't stay in "walking" mode — start jogging gradually.
Poles, yes or no?
For long sustained climbs, poles add 5-10% efficiency (Coca & Schiraldi 2017 studies). They let you:
When it's worth it: ultras with +5,000 ft of climb, mixed terrain, long races (>6h).
When not: short trails, technical terrain that requires hands, races where you can't stash them.
Trail-specific poles (carbon, folding) cost USD 100-200. If you're going ultra, it's an obvious investment. For one 25-50K, borrowed works.
How to train hard walking
Runners almost never train walking. And then they need it in a race. Three session types:
### 1. Power hiking hill repeats
### 2. Long sustained climb
### 3. "Real" trail with changes
Typical rookie mistakes
1. Running everything that can be run. You think "if I walk I'll be slower" — false above 18%.
2. Walking dragging your feet (small steps without drive). Power hiking is active, not passive.
3. Not using your hands. Hand→thigh transfer is the trick that separates you.
4. Low cadence. If you take long strides at 60-80/min, you fatigue more. Aim for 110+.
5. Under-training the transition. You get used to one mode and lose time on every switch.
The mental factor
In a race, the moment to switch from running to power hiking feels like "giving up." It isn't — it's strategy. Elites plan it kilometer by kilometer. Kilian Jornet walks sections of UTMB an amateur would try to run. Not because he can't run — because walking is cheaper and he finishes faster.
Practicing power hiking also trains the mental switch.
How Vetta applies it
If your goal is trail with +3,300 ft D+ or ultra, the Vetta engine automatically programs 1-2 weekly power hiking sessions in the specific phase, adjusting for your equipment (with or without poles). If you marked "poles" in your inventory, the workouts incorporate them.
[Load your trail goal](https://vettatrainer.com/signup) and let the engine build your week with power hiking integrated.