Skiddaw Little Man
Skiddaw Little Man, also called Little Man, is a fell in the English Lake District; it is situated four kilometres north of the town of Keswick and reaches a height of.
Topography
Little Man is often overlooked and disregarded as an independent and distinct fell owing to its name making it sound like a minor top of its parent fell Skiddaw, which in fact lies northwest. With a topographical prominence of, Little Man qualifies comfortably as a Hewitt and Nuttall hill and is regarded as a separate fell by renowned mountain writers Alfred Wainwright and Bill Birkett. The fell is actually called Little Man on Ordnance Survey maps and by many guide books.To the north and east Little Man is connected to the Skiddaw massif, Lonscale Fell being the nearest separate fell to the east, away. To the south and the west the fell falls away steeply, with fast flowing streams draining the fell into the River Derwent. southeast of the main summit lies an lower top called Lesser Man, which is adorned with an unusual cairn consisting of rocks and old fence posts. A further southeast of Lesser Man, on the other side of the bridleway from Keswick to Skiddaw, stands Jenkin Hill, this flat-topped height being regarded as an outlier of Little Man.