A Hardy is any one of a category of mountain, hill or high point in the United Kingdom which is the highest point in a hill range; island over 1,000 acres (400 ha); or top-tier administrative area.
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The Hardy hill list was compiled by Ian Hardy in the early 1990s, published in two booklet editions in the later 1990s, and updated in a third edition in 2010 in a much-expanded book format, The Hardys - The UK's High Points.[1][2][3]
The Hardy hill list was accepted by the Long Distance Walkers Association (LDWA) as an authority in the late 1990s and has featured in its magazine Strider.[4][5] The hill list is included as an authority for County Tops on the LDWA's website.[6] The hill list has also featured in Country Walking and The Great Outdoors magazines.[7][8][9][10][11]
There are 342 Hardys identified in the United Kingdom: the high points of 61 hill ranges, 91 islands and 190 administrative areas (where the high point is not a hill range or island). There are 178 in England, 31 in Wales, 107 in Scotland and 26 in Northern Ireland.
Within the Hardy list, there are 135 "Core" Hardys, the compiler's original list before a formal lower size limit for islands was established and before the large-scale administrative area changes from the mid-1990s onwards.[12] The highest Hardy is Ben Nevis in Scotland at 1,344 metres, the United Kingdom's highest point, and the lowest location identified is on Hayling Island in Hampshire at only 10 metres. An additional Hardy has been proposed, Portsea Island in Hampshire, on which Portsmouth stands.
Many Hardys feature in other major hill lists (for example, there are 10 Munros, 23 Hewitts and 127 Marilyns) but the Hardy list is unique in identifying high points in the three separate categories of hill ranges, islands and administrative areas. This means there are Hardys all over the United Kingdom, not just in mountain and hill areas, so many Hardys are in lowland and even urban areas, and on small islands. Thus at least one or more Hardys are accessible wherever a person lives in the United Kingdom, and irrespective of their level of fitness.
Hardys can be "bagged" in the same way as summits in other hill lists.