Nutrition & fuelling

Fuel the runner you're becoming.

Calm, practical nutrition guidance built around marathon training — energy, recovery and confidence, never restriction or guilt.

Our nutrition principles

  • Fuel supports training — it is not something to earn.
  • Consistency matters more than perfection.
  • Simple, regular meals beat any extreme plan.
  • Recovery nutrition helps your body absorb the work you did.
  • Hydration is training equipment — small sips, all day.

Your nutrition journey

Eleven calm chapters. Read them in any order — the ones with arrows open into a fuller, deeper guide.

Everyday Marathon Nutrition

The calm baseline that quietly powers every week of training.

Hydration & Electrolytes

Small sips, all day. Salt matters when you sweat a lot.

Open the guide

Pre-Run Fuel

Top up what's needed for the run ahead — no more.

Post-Run Recovery

Eat soon, eat enough — that's where adaptation happens.

Open the guide

Long-Run Fuel Strategy

Practise fuelling on long runs so race day feels familiar.

Open the guide

Race Week Nutrition

Calm, familiar food. Slightly more carbs. Plenty to drink.

Open the guide

Race Morning Guidance

Eat what you know. Drink early. Don't rush new things.

Open the guide

Recovery Week Nutrition

Lower mileage doesn't mean lower fuel.

Sustainable Weight Management

If body composition matters to you, take the slow, calm route.

Busy-Life Healthy Eating

Simple, repeatable meals beat any “perfect” plan.

Beginner Nutrition Mistakes

The handful of things almost every new runner gets wrong.

If you ever feel anxious about fuelling, read this

  • You do not need a perfect diet to train successfully.
  • Many runners overcomplicate fuelling — keep it simple.
  • Hunger is information, not a problem to solve through restriction.
  • There is no single “correct” runner's meal.
  • Your body adapts best when it has enough energy to repair.

Questions about your own fuelling?

The Journey Coach can talk through hydration, long-run fuelling and race-week food — supportively and without medical advice.

Open Journey Coach

General nutrition guidance

Nutrition tips are educational and non-medical. They are not a personalised plan and don't replace advice from a qualified dietitian, especially if you have a medical condition.