|
USES |
| Nightswimming - great fun with your friends if the pool's warm enough! |
Take them roller-skating and stand out from the crowd. |
| Join in with all the other glowers at a concert or festival; an essential selection if you're going to the three day events like Glastonbury and Reading. |
Make a trail in the woods so you can find your way back out easily. You don't need to place them end to end, about 10 to 20 metres apart should be okay. 100m, 400m relay races - use a glowstick as a baton and race round a track in the dead of night with your friends! |
| Thread some rope through the loop, tie a knot, and swing it around you to create some dazzling blurred effects. |
Hide some glowsticks round your house and get your friends to find them. A great game to make a memorable party. |
| Power outages - you never know how long you'll have to wait for the power to go back on. It probably won't be long but time goes much slower when you can't see anything! Have a handful of glowsticks at the ready so you can move round in the dark! |
Float one in your fish tank and see what the fish make of it. |
| Take one on a ferry journey - just in case you end up 'man overboard'! |
Attach them to skateboards and rollerblades to make them look futuristic and cool. |
Save a life!!! - it's true and they can. |
Make it easier for firemen to find you in thick smoke. |
| When walking at night, for example on camping excursions, use glowsticks to avoid getting separated from your group. |
Use glowsticks to mark emergency exits. |
| Running/Jogging - increase your visibility at night and make others aware of you for your safety. |
Car breakdown's - flag down passers-by; help is never far way with a glowstick. |
| Use glowsticks to mark emergency exits. |
Wear on halloween when you're out trick or treating. |
| Cyclists - use glow sticks to signal to motorists when turning. |
Road-side emergency - mark accident scenes and obstructions with safety glow stick |
Mining - miners use glowsticks to investigate gas leaks and other dangers; glowsticks boldly glow in places no other light source can safely go. |
Create your own signaling language and teach your friends. |
| Glowsticks are a safe light source when close to hazardous chemicals, gas mains and damaged electricity wires. |
Strap some onto a remote control car and tear around the neighbourhood at night. |
| Strap one onto the rear bumper of your car in thick fog or just when traveling in a convoy with others to avoid losing them. |
Attach a glowstick to your dog's collar before you let him off the lead at night - no more worrying about losing him or seeing where he's got to. |