Question Author
All right, I’ll put you all out of your misery. Here goes:
Forget the North Pole and polar bears and move to the other end of the world.
About one-sixth of a mile north of the South pole (actually 1/2π) there is a circle of latitude (A) exactly one mile in circumference.
Take another circle of latitude (B) one mile north of that.
You can start anywhere on B, walk a mile south until you meet A, walk once around A to get back to where you joined it, then retrace your steps to B. You have walked a mile south, a mile east or west and a mile north and got back to where you started.
What’s more, the number of points on B from which you could have started is infinite.
But stay! There is more!
Inside A is another circle which is exactly half a mile in circumference. Starting from a circle one mile north of that you repeat the procedure, this time going twice around the inner circle. You can repeat this for circle of one third of a mile in circumference, one quarter and so on until the circle becomes too small to walk around.
So in the end you have a large number of circles from which too start, each having an infinite number of starting points.
Rather dwarfs the North Pole answer, doesn’t it? But, of course, pace Old Geezer, you can make te North Pole unique by specifying a bear, since there are no bears in the Antarctic.