Inside the Sivananda Yoga Ranch Daily Schedule

Inside the Sivananda Yoga Ranch Daily Schedule
The bell rings at 5:30 a.m. across the Sivananda Yoga Ranch grounds in Woodbourne, New York, and if this is your first morning, the darkness feels impossibly early. By day four, you'll find yourself awake before the bell, body already attuned to the rhythm.
Morning: The Foundation of Practice
By 6:00 a.m., you're settling onto your mat or cushion in the meditation hall for Satsang—the spiritual gathering that anchors each day. The room fills with bodies still heavy with sleep, the air cool and quiet. Morning Satsang includes meditation, chanting of Sanskrit mantras, and a short inspirational talk. On your first day, the chanting might feel foreign, the sitting uncomfortable. By midweek, you're surprised to find yourself knowing the words to the Gayatri Mantra.
At 8:00 a.m., the asana class begins. This isn't power yoga or hot yoga—it's classical Sivananda yoga, working systematically through the twelve basic postures. The teacher moves slowly, offering modifications and encouragements. Your hamstrings protest in the forward fold; your arms shake in shoulder stand. The practice lasts ninety minutes, and by the final relaxation, something in your nervous system has fundamentally shifted.
Breakfast follows at 10:00 a.m., served buffet-style in the dining hall. The food is vegetarian, often vegan, and prepared according to yogic principles. Expect warm oatmeal with maple syrup, fresh fruit, whole grain toast, herbal teas. There's a quiet, nourishing quality to the meal—no phones, no rushing. Just eating. On your first morning, you might feel awkward in the silence. By day four, it feels like a gift.
Late Morning: Deepening Understanding
The late morning schedule varies depending on your program type. Retreat participants typically have a workshop or lecture from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.—perhaps a session on pranayama breathing techniques, yogic philosophy, or meditation practices. Teacher training participants dive into anatomy, teaching methodology, or scriptural study of the Bhagavad Gita.
This is where the Sivananda tradition reveals its depth. These aren't generic wellness talks but transmissions of an ancient lineage, tracing back through Swami Vishnu-devananda to Swami Sivananda himself.
Midday: The Sacred Pause
Lunch is served at 1:00 p.m., and it's the heartiest meal of the day. The kitchen prepares Indian-inspired vegetarian dishes—dal, rice, seasonal vegetables, fresh salads, and always something unexpected like homemade hummus or a Thai-spiced soup. The food nourishes without weighing you down, a careful balance that supports the afternoon ahead.
Afternoon: Integration and Choice
From 2:00 to 4:00 p.m., the schedule opens. This is your time. Some retreat participants book optional services—a therapeutic massage, a private consultation with a senior teacher, time in the sauna. Others simply walk the 77-acre property, following trails through the Catskills woodland, sitting by the pond, or resting in their rooms.
Teacher training participants often use this time for group study or practice teaching sessions. The afternoon free time serves different purposes on different days. Early in your stay, you might nap, catching up on sleep debt. Later, you might journal, practice meditation independently, or have the kinds of unhurried conversations that only happen when everyone's moved out of their ordinary life.
At 4:00 p.m., optional karma yoga (selfless service) sessions begin. You might help in the gardens, fold laundry, or assist with meal prep—simple, mindful work that the tradition considers as important as asana practice.
Evening: Completion
Dinner arrives at 6:00 p.m., lighter than lunch—perhaps soup, salad, bread, and herbal tea. The dining hall hums with quiet conversation now; the initial awkwardness has dissolved.
Evening Satsang begins at 8:00 p.m., mirroring the morning session but with a different energy. Bodies are tired, minds quieter. The chanting carries a deeper resonance. After the final Om, the hall empties slowly. Some head to bed by 9:30 p.m.; others linger, talking quietly under the stars.
The Arc of Transformation
What's remarkable isn't any single element of the schedule but the cumulative effect. The first day feels long, strange, even difficult. By day four, something has shifted. The early rising feels natural. The vegetarian meals satisfy completely. The silence becomes spacious rather than empty. You've dropped into a rhythm that humans have practiced for thousands of years—waking with the sun, moving, studying, serving, resting. It's simple, structured, and surprisingly transformative.



