Sure, it is about 2,400 miles between the two. Most aircraft can fly that in about four hours, so you could actually fly there, spend half a day there and fly back.
Assuming you mean the north pole of the sky: They turn in small circles around the north pole - one turn per day.
because the north pole is titled away from the sun.
If you are at exactly the north or south pole the measurement is in Revolutions per Day And that speed is 1 Revolution Per Day.
north pole
Polaris, also known as the north star or pole star.
The North pole
The International Date Line is an imaginary line that runs from the North Pole to the South Pole. It marks the boundary between one calendar day and the next. When you cross the line, you either advance a day when traveling east or go back a day when traveling west.
The Earth is on a 23.5 degrees tilt, causing this effect. Note that this effect only happens for six months and later this effect gets passed onto the South Pole giving it a longer day than the North Pole.
If you're standing exactly on the north Pole, then during the six months when the sun never rises, Polaris ... the "Pole" star or "North" star ... makes a tiny circle directly over your head once a day, about 1/3 of a degree from the North Celestial Pole. Everything else in the sky circles the same point once a day, but in much larger circles.
The International Date Line marks the location where a new day begins. It runs from the north pole to the south pole.
The equator.... :)
This phenomenon is due to Earth's axial tilt. In June, Scotland enjoys the benefit of the sun being on the part of the ecliptic where it is farthest north of the equator -- approximately 23.4° north. This means that, in June, the sun shines more directly onto Scotland and for longer each day, than at other times of the year. So, the sun is above the horizon for longer portions of each day, and below the horizon for shorter portions of each day. This effect is most apparent at the north pole, and least apparent at the equator, but is observable over the entire northern hemisphere.