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How to Track Santa Claus with NORAD on Christmas Eve

The people who answer the phones will be at Peterson Space Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado. People who aren't in the service will also be there to answer the phones.

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How to Track Santa Claus with NORAD on Christmas Eve

How to Track Santa Claus with NORAD on Christmas Eve: They have something that can find Santa Claus. There will be a 68th Christmas in a row where the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) will track St. Nick as he goes around the world to bring good kids a very happy Christmas.

How to Track Santa Claus with NORAD on Christmas Eve

From 4 a.m. to midnight on December 24, more than 1,250 soldiers from the joint forces of the United States and Canada will be answering the phones and speaking eight different languages to help people who want to know where Santa is.

The people who answer the phones will be at Peterson Space Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado. People who aren’t in the service will also be there to answer the phones.

How is Santa referred to in other countries?

The program manager for Norad Tracks Santa, 1st Lt. Sean Carter, told Fox News, “We track Santa with the same tools that we use every day to keep North America safe: our jets, our radars, and our satellites.”

Even though it might seem silly at first, Carter talked about the “importance” of the Santa tracker and what the custom means all over the world.

It was a group of kids from Ukraine calling on a small battery phone last year. They said all they wanted was for Santa to turn on their power again, he said. “That’s the kind of thing that makes us stop and think about how far NORAD Track Santa can reach.”

NORAD got more than 250,000 calls in just 20 hours one year.

Fighter jets are said to have “intercepted” Santa Claus many times over the years as part of this program. It all started in 1955 when a child called the private number of the Continental Air Defense Command, which was NORAD’s predecessor.

Colonel Harry Shoup, who is now retired, was the first person to track down Santa.

If I want to find Santa, how do I call NORAD?

On Christmas Eve, the phones will start working at 4 a.m. Mountain Standard Time. Call 1-877-HI-NORAD (1-877 446-6723 to talk to a trained person who can track down Santa.

However, this writer can confirm that following Santa online at noradsanta.org or through the Norad Tracks Santa app is just as fun, if not more so. Also, you can play free games on the site, such as cosmic air hockey.

NORAD’s website also has a lot of information about Santa’s sleigh.

The digital tracker shows Santa’s speed, telemetry, future locations, and places he has already been around the world.

Santa normally starts in the Pacific Ocean at the International Date Line and heads west. In the past, Santa first went to the South Pacific, then to New Zealand and Australia. NORAD says he then shoots up to Japan, then across to Asia, then across to Africa, and finally out to Western Europe, Canada, the US, Mexico, and Central and South America.

Remember that the weather can change Santa’s route, so it’s really hard to tell what will happen. NORAD works with Santa’s Elf Launch Staff to plan his launch time, but after that, Santa makes all the decisions.

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