Airmen in Kangerlussuaq, a military town nobody has heard of

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This article by Jenna Biter was originally published by Coffee or Die.

This summer, you should vacation to the world’s largest island. No, not Australia — that’s a continent. I’m talking about not-so-green Greenland, the North Atlantic island that is part of the Kingdom of Denmark and three times the size of Texas. Forget your bathing suit and sunscreen, however, and instead pack a balaclava and parka. Two-thirds of the island country lies above the Arctic Circle, and 80% is covered in a flat, seemingly endless sheet of white — one of only two masses of more than 19,000 square miles of glacial ice worldwide. (Antarctica is home to the other.) If you go to Greenland and don’t walk on the ice, did you even go?

To get to Greenland’s ice cap, you’ll probably end up 30 miles north of the Arctic Circle in Kangerlussuaq, a southwestern settlement known as “the gateway to Greenland.” It boasts 500 residents, is the only town with road access to the ice, and is home to the island country’s main international airport (at least for now). As a result, Kangerlussuaq primarily exists to support the ebb and flow of travelers. But if you look closely — past the rickety, gumball-colored houses built in a “U” around the airstrip; the ’90s vehicles zooming around the curve, from one side to the other, like there is somewhere else to be; and the runway backed up with Christmas-red Air Greenland turboprops — you’ll see the familiar, utilitarian neutrals of U.S. military aircraft resting on the flight line. Believe it or not, Kangerlussuaq is a military town with more than 80 years of history.

Related: Soldiers issued high-speed Arctic gear as Army gets serious about fighting in the cold

Kangerlussuaq then

An LC-130 “Skibird” with the 109th Airlift Wing, New York Air National Guard, takes off from Kangerlussuaq, Greenland, on June 29, 2014, for Summit Camp, a research station on the island country’s nearly 700,000-square-mile ice cap. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Benjamin German)

Situated on the banks of a glacier-carved fjord, Kangerlussuaq was founded in 1941 as the U.S. air base Bluie West-8. The Army chose the area for an airstrip because the nearby cliffs protect against bad weather, making the spot ideal for planes to take off and land. For that reason, the military installation served as a stopover for aircraft en route to the European Theater during World War II.

After the war, Bluie West-8 was renamed Sondrestrom Air Base. For several decades, the base served as the springboard for resupply airlifts to Cold War radar sites on the ice cap. Even though Sondrestrom closed in 1992 after the Iron Curtain fell, the U.S. military still lives on in Kangerlussuaq, though with a much smaller footprint. Every year, the New York Air National Guard’s 109th Airlift Wing summers in Kangerlussuaq, flying resupply missions from the town to remote research camps in Greenland. Kangerlussuaq also serves as the 109th’s jumping-off point for Arctic survival training on the ice.

Related: Cold-weather adventures in the US Army

Kangerlussuaq now

Kangerlussuaq — Kanger, for short — isn’t your typical military town, but it is one all the same, complete with the relics and rituals. There are the husks of artillery, a museum repurposed from the base headquarters, and a snarky, old sign: “Sondrestrom is a nice place to live, by order of the base commander.” To this day, New York’s Guardsmen still sleep in dorms left over from past wars, and even Greenlanders inhabit U.S. military history, smoking cigarettes only to put them out on empty rocket pods propped up around town.

And then there are the rituals. Rumor has it one pilot from the 109th dons his furs — a full-length coat and hat — every time he crosses the Arctic Circle. In something called a “Blue Nose” ceremony, veterans of the High North welcome newbies to the top of the world. 

But perhaps eating hot dogs, called “Sondi Dogs” after Sondrestrom Air Base, is the 109th’s most beloved ritual of all.

An airman with the New York Air National Guard prepares to eat a beloved “Sondi Dog.” According to legend, not only is the hot dog machine a Cold War relic, but the Sondi Dogs very well may be, too. Photo by Ryan Fitting/Coffee or Die.

Day in and day out, grayish, slightly longer-than-usual franks steam away on the flight line in a retro hot dog machine. Crew members might scarf down one or two between flights to the ice — while mechanics seem to eat them all the time: before, during, and after repairs.

According to legend, not only is the machine a Cold War relic, but the Sondi Dogs very well may be, too. No one knows exactly when or how the picnic meat arrived in Kangerlussuaq, but the supply never ends, even though the demand is high. A wall plaque says one airman, Zach Lettko, ate a record 26 Sondi Dogs in one day. Plus, consumption is often mandatory. A flier reads: “ATTENTION: FLIGHT CREW MUST CONSUME A MINIMUM OF 1 HOT DOG EACH PER HOUR OF WEATHER DELAY.” That might read like punishment, but the Guardsmen actually seem to enjoy eating Sondi Dogs, or at least the bonding experience.

Though the larger U.S. military left Kangerlussuaq decades ago, New York’s 109th Airlift Wing keeps 80-plus years of history alive by making more. So if you ever make it out to Greenland, be sure to visit the ice sheet, but also plan to spend extra time taking in some history at Kanger — and if you’re lucky, maybe a Sondi Dog, too.

Editor’s Note: This article has been updated to correct a wrong byline.

Feature Image: Members of the 103rd Maintenance Squadron, Connecticut Air National inspect the wing of a C-130 H aircraft, April 2, 2019 in Kangerlussuaq, Greenland. The 118th flew to Greenland in support of the National Science Foundation climate research mission. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Tamara R. Dabney)

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Coffee or Die Magazine is Black Rifle Coffee Company’s online news and lifestyle magazine. Launched in June 2018, the magazine covers stories both about and for the military, first responder, veteran, and coffee enthusiast communities.

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