Official Norad Santa Tracker https //www.noradsanta.org/
Official Norad Santa Tracker https //www.noradsanta.org/
Track Santa’s route in 3D. Use the navigation controls on the upper right to change the view. Icons show locations Santa has been spotted. Click on an icon to learn more about the location. Video icons indicate that Santa Cams have recorded footage of Santa at that location. Click on an icon to watch the video.
The toolbar on the upper left is used to change the camera between following Santa and free roaming, to switch between 3D and 2D, and for other tasks.
In addition to the navigation controls, hold the left mouse button and drag to rotate the view, and use the mouse wheel to zoom in and out.
NORAD Tracks Santa Â
Since 1958, NORAD has kept tabs on Santa Claus every year. However, in 1955, he began to be monitored by NORAD’s predecessor, the Continental Air Defense Command.
The group claims to track Santa with radar, satellites, and combat jets. Santa’s journey from the International Date Line in the Pacific Ocean to your house is unknown in time, although it does begin in the South Pacific, continues to Australia, Asia, Africa, Europe, and North and South America.
The launch time is confirmed by NORAD in conjunction with Santa’s elf launch staff, but after that, “Santa calls the shots,” as confirmed on NORAD’s website.
They go on to say that Santa must operate inside his own time-space continuum because else he would hurry the essential duty of giving presents to children and promoting joy to everyone.
Around 750 Canadian and American military and civilian volunteers will help spread holiday cheer on Christmas Eve when the NORAD Tracks Santa Operations Center goes “fully operational” at 4 a.m. MST. To learn more about Santa’s whereabouts, you can contact a volunteer at Colorado’s Peterson Space Force Base or check out their website.