About this race
The Napf-Marathon, held in Trubschachen, Switzerland's Emmental region, is an October mountain running event. The full marathon, established in 1989, covers 42.195 km with 1,542 meters of elevation gain, distinguishing it from road marathons with inclines. The event also offers shorter and shared distances: a 20 km Berglauf, a half marathon starting from the Napf summit, a two-person team race divided into 20 km and 22 km segments, a flexible group option, and a 20 km Nordic walking course. Local gymnastics clubs from Trub and Trubschachen manage the event, catering to serious mountain runners, club runners, recreational participants, walkers, individuals, and teams.
The course crosses the Napfbergland via asphalt roads, village paths, hiking trails, and more rugged mountain tracks. Reaching its apex at the Napf summit (1,408 meters), the half marathon utilizes the latter portion of the marathon route. Participants encounter the green, undulating Pre-Alpine landscape of Emmental, with potential vistas of the Jura range and Bernese Alps. Compared to large city marathons, this race is modest, with marathon fields typically in the low hundreds. However, the winning times underscore the course's difficulty; even top male finishers generally require around three hours, and the women's records are significantly slower than typical flat-marathon speeds.