The Dodds

A Dodd is a hill between 500m and 599m high with a drop of at least 30 metres all round.  The name Dodds was originally derived from DOnald Deweys, Deweys and Scotland.  The Irish and Manx Dodds were added in 2020 and are listed separately on this website.

A Subdodd is a hill which just fails (by up to 10m) to qualify on the drop rule, i.e. between 500m and 599m with 20-29m drop.

(Dodds appear as Class=5 on this website, and Subdodds as Class=s5).

Hills between 400 and 499m with 30m drop appear as class=4.  Those between 490 and 499m with 20-29m drop are also included as class=s4..

My Progress
I have completed 0 (0%) of 1338 Dodds of Britain [Map*]
0 (0%) of 949 Scottish Dodds [Map*]
0 (0%) of 168 English Dodds [Map*]
0 (0%) of 226 Welsh Dodds [Map*]

0 (0%) of 5 Manx Dodds [Map*]
0 (0%) of 187 Irish Dodds [Map*]

The discrepancy in the totals is due to 5 hills on the Scotland/England border which are included in the totals for both countries.

(* please note that map may be slow to load)

League Table - compare your progress with other members of this site.


Dodds by Topographical Area

Click on a hill total on the list below to show the Mountain Search page for Dodds in the corresponding topographical area.
The topographical areas, with their names and numbering are taken from The 1033 High Hills of Britain by Alan Dawson.
You can list the Dodds by different area types via the Mountain Search page.

  


Acknowledgements

The main researchers for the list were Michael Dewey (hills in England and in Wales), David Purchase (hills in Southern Scotland), Clem Clements, John Kirk, Tony Payne and Rob Woodall (hills in the highlands and islands of Scotland), Myrddyn Phillips and Michael Dewey (hills in Ireland), Mark Jackson, Chris Crocker and Jim Bloomer, aided by survey results from G&J Surveys, Alan Dawson and MountainViews.  The Irish Subdodd data were originally sourced from The Cuigs listing by John Forsythe and Myrddyn Phillips.

For further details and history see...
http://www.rhb.org.uk/marhofn/marhofn280/marhofn28015.htm
http://www.rhb.org.uk/dodds/