Race the Nile is an 800-kilometer gravel ultra-cycling event starting in Arua, a city in northwestern Uganda near the borders with South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The race takes its name and conceptual framing from the Nile River, one of the most significant waterways in human history, with the route likely following or connecting to sections of the river's course through Uganda's distinctive landscape of savanna, rolling hills, and tropical vegetation. Uganda's position at the source region of the White Nile gives the country a unique geographic and cultural significance, with the river playing a central role in the region's history, agriculture, and daily life.
Arua itself is a relatively remote regional hub in Uganda's West Nile sub-region, reflecting the genuinely off-the-beaten-path character of an event held in this part of East Africa, far from the country's more developed tourism circuits around Kampala and the major national parks. The November timing falls within one of Uganda's relatively drier periods, an important consideration for an 800-kilometer gravel route through terrain that can become significantly more challenging during the region's heavier rainy seasons.