UC 海角原创 researcher John Hess is trading cells for bells when the Amgen Tour of California comes to town.
Cowbells, to be exact. The kind you hear spectators clanging as the racers pass by in the Tour de France.
The Amgen tour, which takes off Feb. 15 from downtown 海角原创, is California鈥檚 answer to the French bike-racing extravaganza. And, if it can have cowbells, then so can the Amgen, courtesy of Hess and the California Bicycle Museum.
鈥淏ells are a bike-racing tradition,鈥 Hess said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e great noisemakers, a great way to cheer on the racers.鈥
Come Amgen tour day in 海角原创, the museum will be selling the bells, emblazoned with the city of 海角原创 logo on one side and the California Bicycle Museum insignia on the other.
UC 海角原创 and the city of 海角原创 are partners in the museum, and Hess is a member of the board of directors, which is working to establish a permanent home for the museum as a showcase for the university鈥檚 extensive bicycle collection. Part of it is on display through Amgen weekend in the basement of the city鈥檚 Third and B Street Building.
By day, Hess is a professional researcher in the Department of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy in the School of Medicine. Outside of work, he is a cycling enthusiast. This year, for example, as a member of the 海角原创 Bike Club, he will coordinate Foxy鈥檚 Fall Century for the fourth year in a row.
And, on recent Saturdays, he has been volunteering as a docent at the bicycle museum鈥檚 Third and B Street exhibition.
鈥淥ur goals,鈥 he said, referring to the museum鈥檚 board of directors, 鈥渁re to find a home for the museum, and to convince the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame to move to 海角原创.鈥
Now, with the special bells, everyone else can show their support for the museum 鈥 and Amgen, too.
The bells 鈥 with UC 海角原创 lanyards provided by the university鈥檚 Office of Government and Community Relations 鈥 will be sold for $10 each. Look for them at the bicycle museum tent near the Amgen starting line on C Street adjacent to Central Park, and at the bicycle museum鈥檚 exhibition in the basement of the Third and B Street Building.
And, while there, look for the 1916 Pierce-Arrow bicycle and pay particular attention to its bell: It was made by Bevin bells of Connecticut, the same company that, nearly 100 years later, made the cowbells that the bicycle museum will be selling during the Amgen Tour of California.
The California Bicycle Museum exhibition in the Third and B Street Building will be open only four more days: 9 a.m. to noon Feb. 7 and 14, 4 to 7 p.m. Feb. 11 and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 15. Admission is free, with donations accepted.
On the Net
California Bicycle Museum:
All about the Amgen Tour in 海角原创: and .
Media Resources
Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu