American and Canadian military personnel and their helpers are gearing up for the annual Christmas mission to track Father Christmas, or rather Santa Claus, as he makes his deliveries on Christmas Eve.
Volunteers at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs will answer an estimated 125,000 calls from children around the world who need to know where Santa is, and at what point he'll be arriving at their house.
his year is the 60th anniversary of the North American Aerospace Defence Command's (NORAD) Santa Tracker.
What exactly is the Santa Tracker?
As NORAD, a join mission between the US and Canadian military, explains it, it is the use of sophisticated monitoring and defence equipment to track Santa's sleigh using the heat signature from Rudolf's nose.
This allows NORAD to provide callers with real time updates on Satna's progress.
And it doesn't stop there. NORAD explains that fighter pilots "often escort Santa's sleigh through North American airspace", while the navy and coast guard secure the seas beneath him.
NORAD, or rather its predecessor the Continental Air Defence Command (CONAD), started tracking Santa in 1955.
The story goes that on Christmas Eve in 1955, with CONAD watching out for a nuclear strike, a child called the Red Phone in CONAD's secure bunker.
When CONAD chief Colonel Harry Shoup answered it, the child asked to speak to Santa.
It turns out the Sears department store had published an advert featuring Father Christmas with a phone number with the caption, "call me on my private phone, and I will talk to you personally any time day or night".
Are you kidding me?
Well, without wanting to be a Grinch about this, if the secure Red Phone was linked to the public phone system then I'll eat my Santa hat.
Okay, so what exactly are you saying?
I'm saying the Santa tracker started life as a cynical Cold War PR campaign.
You're frostier than a snowman. Where's your Christmas spirit?
Okay, there probably is some truth in the story.
Colonel Harry Shoup did get a call from a child asking about Santa that night, and it has sparked a Christmas tradition that sees people give up their time to bring a bit of festive cheer.
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