Home_menu Home_menu FAQ_menu Login_menu Wishlist_menu Shopping Cart_menu Contacts_menu EOTR_Site_Map
Menutop-Copyright_EOTR
Menubottom-Copyright_EOTR    

; Registration code ; Reglink opened in new frame? ; Name of new frame for reglink ; resolution (1-8) ; Image 1 to load ; statusbar msg on image 1 ; Flip effect img 1 (0 .. 7) ; Link 1 ; Image 2 to load ; statusbar msg on image 2 ; Flip effect img 2 (0 .. 7) ; Link 2 ; Image 3 to load ; statusbar msg on image 3 ; Flip effect img 3 (0 .. 7) ; Link 3 ; speed of fade (1-255) ; pause (value = milliseconds). ; Extra height (applet h - img h) ; Flip curve (1 .. 10) ; Shading (0 .. 4) ; Red in background (0 .. 255) ; Green in background (0 .. 255) ; Blue in background (0 .. 255) ; Optional image over applet ; Over image X offset ; Over image Y offset ; Memory deallocation delay ; Task priority (1..10) ; Min. milliseconds/frame for sync Sorry, your browser doesn't support Java ; Msg in no java browsers

Love this picture! Click image to view/download a more detailed version.


Camping will never be the same again…

Sometimes you can plan where you’ll end up.   Camping at the riverside tonight, tomorrow a camel trek up west, caravanning in the unforgiving red centre next week.   But even the best laid plans can go astray — a blown tyre, a broken axle, a little too much rehydration of the intoxicating kind…

Pull over and relax.   You don’t need the lights of civilisation to find the esky in the back of the 4WD, and you don’t need to start a bushfire to be seen by anybody who’s driving past.   c D–Light™s can do all this and more.   Use them to:–

  • Read a map.
  • Find the Aeroguard.
  • Give you enough light to thread a worm onto a hook when you’re night–fishing.
  • See what you caught before you land it — fish are OK, cranky crocs are not!
  • Watch the billy boil.
  • Locate the tin of Baked Beans that’s been sliding around in the back of the ute, before you starve.
  • Discover the bottle of Johnny Walker’s empty, but that there’s some Jim Beam left.
  • Work out whether the hot heavy breathing on your face is your girlfriend or a dingo.
  • Identify the type of snake that just slithered out of your sleeping bag (not THAT one!)
  • To see whose company you’re keeping.
  • Light up the area around the car.
  • Draw attention to yourself when you’re lost.   Or lonely.
  • Send secret light signals or coded messages to the other side of the camping grounds.
  • Take a night walk when there’s no moonlight.
  • As off–road lights that are tough enough and portable enough to rough it with you.
  • Keep one in the backpack when you’re hiking or bushwalking.
  • Morse code distress signalling for when you can be seen but not heard.
  • Find the car keys which you accidentally dropped “somewhere around here".
  • Get the right tool out of the toolbox.
  • Help you see where you put the wheel nut when you were changing that tyre, so you can get the show back on the road.
  • Find the spare jerry can of petrol for the generator.
  • Safer than a gas bottle and flames, especially in hot, dry, fire–prone areas.
  • Put it next to your camping bed for a light source with instant–on / instant–off capabilities.
  • For the nervy types who see strange lights in the sky or hear strange noises in the bushes.
  • Or as UFO lights to imitate alien landings and for playing ghostly pranks on your little brother or sister… To get some sleep as a parent — by providing a feeling of safety and comfort for little kids with overactive imaginations, who heard too many tall tales or ghost stories late at night and are now being scared witless by mean, nasty, big boys and girls.
  • At school camp, to keep reading or playing cards after the teacher orders “lights off” in the cabin, and not catch the teacher’s eye.
  • To flash through the window and catch somebody’s eye in the cabin across the way.
  • Run a spacious outback disco under the stars (or a seriously crowded one in your tent)
  • Or even just plain for fun.

Whichever way you use them, we promise –

Camping will never be the same again…





EOTR_Gallery

View animated pictures as a Gallery