He has a little globe that he goes to and can click on the area of a person and look up there adress he has on file and then it pulls up your house on security camera and he just looks around.
The story of Santa Claus is an American one. So he lives in the North Pole. Sorry, it may take him a bit longer to get to Australia but don't worry because of the time difference it will be one of the first places he'll go to. The American version of St. Nicholas, or Santa Claus originally came from the Dutch version called Sint Klaas. The Dutch settlers in New Amsterdam (New York) brought this fun and lively tradition (some even say cult) to America.
Canada is as it is further north than the US, in fact some of it is in the Arctic Circle and the very northern parts of Canada are practically in the North Pole.
The South Pole does not have a nickname. It is located on the Antarctic continent. A nickname used for the Antarctic is "South". The US base, McMurdo, is nicknamed "Mactown".
I recently came back from the North Pole (ICEX 2011), and while on our way, the crew was told that "about 2500 people" have been to the actual North Pole. The majority of these have been on US and UK Sumarines.
There is no proof of exactly where he is and some think he lives in a magical place in the hearts and minds of all children who believe. Others have other opinions that are not yet fully confirmed. WikiAnswers contributors have given the following information:Santa Claus lives in Finland near the Arctic Circle. His house is about 8 kilometers north of Rovaniemi in Lapland. His address is: Joulumaantie 196930 Arctic Circle FinlandIn North America it is said that Santa lives on the North Pole. However, I doubt that, because he most likely would have been spotted there by at least one of the many expeditions to the spot.Besides Finland, there are other suggested locations, such as: Norway (a place called Drobak), Sweden (Mora) and Denmark that all claim to have a place where Santa Claus lives. My first choice would be Finland, of course (they've done some good marketing for the idea), but the second would be Denmark (they claim the subject lives in Greenland, which is quite remote and cold and scarcely inhabited, so he might have a summer house there or something like this).I know he lives in the Arctic Circle, but people say he lives in the North Pole in Lapland, but Lapland is not in the North Pole, it's in the North of Norway, Sweden and Finland. He doesn't live in the North Pole, he lives in the Arctic Circle.Santa Claus is generally believed to live at the North Pole. We are afraid that we cannot tell you exactly where, as Santa made us promise to keep it top secret.We can verify that there is a US Post Office in Santa Claus, Indiana that does receive enormous amounts of letters addressed to Santa Claus. However, they will not release the information about to where they deliver the letters, even when investigators attempt to force them to provide that information under the Freedom of Information Act. Lawyers are working on this even as this is being written, but the issue is still under legal discussion and, therefore, there is a Santa information gag order that WikiAnswers is required to observe.
Yes. For any point on Earth that is north of the equator, the north celestial pole is above the horizon.
He lives in the North Pole so he doesn't have a zip code in the U.S.
3 I could only find three. SANTA CLAUS, Indiana, Arizona & Georgia. Also there is a 'SANTA', Idaho and a 'NORTH POLE' in Alaska.SantaSanta ClausSt. Nick
it is in the north pole
The story of Santa Claus is an American one. So he lives in the North Pole. Sorry, it may take him a bit longer to get to Australia but don't worry because of the time difference it will be one of the first places he'll go to. The American version of St. Nicholas, or Santa Claus originally came from the Dutch version called Sint Klaas. The Dutch settlers in New Amsterdam (New York) brought this fun and lively tradition (some even say cult) to America.
on the top of your roof or in McDonald's drive thru :)
It is a lot closer to the North Pole.
SANTA CLAUS, Indiana, Arizona & Georgia. Also there is a 'SANTA', Idaho and a 'NORTH POLE' in Alaska. Yes, it is in southern Indiana, naturally they have a Christmas-themed theme park.
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no
The US is completely in the northern hemisphere. Every place in the northern hemisphere is closer to the north pole than it is to the south pole.
South, every direction from the North Pole is south.