Short hop

A short hop, sometimes referred to as a short trip, (PROSE: Five Card Draw) was a manoeuvre in TARDIS-piloting which involved dematerialising the ship and rematerialising a short distance from the original location, without a change in temporal coordinates. (AUDIO: The Roof of the World, Grand Theft Cosmos, Patient Zero, et al.) Occasionally it was also used to refer to short traversals in time while remaining at the same spatial coordinates, (AUDIO: 100 BC) or to journeys only involving a small change in both. (AUDIO: The Eye of the Scorpion)

In the early days of piloting their TARDIS, the Doctor had minimal control, and so short hops and precise long-distance travel alike were always difficult. The First Doctor's first ever attempt at a short hop, however, was successful, involving a movement from the bottom of the ocean of Kandalinga to an artificial causeway several thousand miles away. (PROSE: The Fishmen of Kandalinga) Later, the First Doctor was able to pilot the TARDIS precisely from a forest to a clearing to save one Lady Mary from a gang of bandits. The Second Doctor was particularly surprised at this, noting that he has trouble with short trips. The First Doctor assured him, however, that he too usually struggles, but that on this one occasion he "somehow" knew the precise coordinates he needed to make the jump. (PROSE: Five Card Draw)

Later, the Doctor became more adept at piloting his ship, however short trips still required a degree of skill to achieve. (AUDIO: Grand Theft Cosmos, The Lure of the Nomad) Although on some occasions a short hop was all the TARDIS could manage after being badly damaged, (AUDIO: Patient Zero) and was typically considered an easier journey to pull of. (AUDIO: The Burning Prince)

The term was also used by Rassilon in the Divergent Universe (AUDIO: The Next Life) and Rasmus. (AUDIO: Deeptime Frontier)