| Published
September 16, 2008 |
Volume
16, Number 9
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Running of the Cows
is Moo-ving
Experience

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Kendra
Knudsen, a
2008 graduate of Amador Valley High School sits between her art cow,
Bovine-stein, representing the Amador Valley High School physics
classes (left) and the Foothill High School art cow (right) which was
designed by students in Caroline Fields Advanced Placement Art History
class.
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Are you ready for the September 20 Running of the Cows, arguably one of
the most eccentric events ever conjured up by a group of civic-minded
volunteers? Presented by the Amador-Livermore Valley
Historical
Society (ALVHS), the Running is actually the middle phase of a
whimsical, bovine-themed fund-raising campaign benefiting
Pleasanton’s the Museum on Main. The cow motif, harking back
to
historic Meadowlark Dairy, the first such operation to be certified in
the state, will receive its ultimate expression in the Udderly Divine
Bovine Event, a festive evening of cuisine tastings, auctions, and
music by Tommy and the 4-Speeds on Saturday, October 4.
Phase I of the campaign began this summer with the birth of the cows,
as local artists unleashed their creative energies to animate 16 large
and 12 small plywood bovines. Decorated for their public debut, the
cows were corralled on the front lawn of the Museum on Main for the
Bovine Beauty Pageant during the First Wednesday Street Party downtown
on August 6. Bovine-stein, the creation of Amador Valley High School
physics department student Kendra Knudsen, took top honors among the
large animals, while Rhinestone Cowgirl, the entry from Valley
Community Bank, trotted off with the tiara in the diminutive
class.
Right now, the fanciful cows are still on display during business hours
at various downtown merchants. On Saturday, September 20, as part of
Pleasanton’s Art & Heritage Celebration, they will mosey over
to
the starting line in front of the Redcoats British Pub, 336 Saint Mary
St., for heats that begin at 1 p.m. With local service clubs, high
schools, and breweries pitted against each other, some interesting
rivalries will be playing out among the three-person teams that
actually propel each bovine down the track. “We are
recruiting
runners, whether teams sponsored by local businesses or students
looking to fulfill community service hours,” says Udder Event Chair
Joanie Fields.
After the Running, the cows will retire for two weeks and then reappear
as auction items at the Udderly Divine Bovine Event. Demand is
traditionally strong, and this year Fields is hoping that at least one
of the prize-winners will top the record $920 previously fetched by a
divine bovine. The large cows make great lawn decorations, while the
small ones fit comfortably in a family room, she notes. For Udder Event
reservations call the museum at (925) 462-2766 or visit www.museumonmain.org.
The ALVHS, under the leadership of new executive director Julia
Bussinger, is enjoying a busy season. Also on tap for the Art and
Heritage Festival, on Sunday, September 21, is "Hollywood in
Pleasanton," a movie walk showcasing six of the 36 films made in
Pleasanton from 1910 to 1943. Local residents will be recreating scenes
and events from the film at each site.
Participants veer off in a different direction with the Museum’s
reservations-only Pleasanton Ghost Walk, Friday and Saturday, October
10-11 and 17-18. For more information on either of these events, call
Rebecca Bruner at 925-577-8802.
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