Heidi Hetzer, a veteran rally driver, is on a globetrotting mission |
I’m familiar with their car talk and
passion for the timeless beauty of vintage vehicles because I often join
members of the Malaysia Singapore Vintage Car Register (MSVCR) for their
exciting estate runs.
They also use
their vehicles to raise funds at charity events but last weekend, when I got a
call from MSVCR Southern Region representative, E. S. Luke, it was for
something else.
He told me about Heidi
Hetzer, a 77-year old rally driver from Berlin who is driving her 1930 Hudson
Great Eight classic around the world and asked if I would like to meet her?
I met Heidi at One-Stop Classic & Sports Garage in Johor Baru |
I had a thousand questions at the tip of my tongue but held it down as
Luke told me that she was en route to Singapore and had a longer stopover in
Johor Baru because her car was in the garage.
The motoring fraternity in Malaysia and
Singapore is familiar with the adventure that Hetzer embarked on from Berlin
since last July and MSVCR members are monitoring her journey as she travelled
south from Thailand to Penang.
When I met them at One-Stop Classic & Sports Garage, Hetzer had her face inside the open car bonnet deep in discussion about the engine with mechanic, Pirakash S. Maniam, and she seems relieved that her car is ready for the road again.
When I met them at One-Stop Classic & Sports Garage, Hetzer had her face inside the open car bonnet deep in discussion about the engine with mechanic, Pirakash S. Maniam, and she seems relieved that her car is ready for the road again.
MSVCR Central Region members, Surjit
Singh and Danny Liew, who escorted Hetzer from Kuala Lumpur to JB, encouraged
Luke to take Hetzer away from the garage for a break because she was
understandably, rather stressed about her car, she affectionately calls Hudo.
This female rally driver is after all, a trained mechanic who is no
stranger to cars and motorbikes because she has scored more than 150 victories
in her illustrious career.
Heidi Hetzer standing on her beloved Hudo at the flag-off from Berlin in July 2014 |
As Luke and I
took Hetzer out, she told me in heavily German-accented English, “It takes half
an hour to convince a man mechanic,” with a shrug and
added, “A woman always have to prove that she’s a mechanic.”
Her Inspiration
“My father brought me up to be modern,”
said Hetzer and explained how her father, entrepreneur Siegfried Hetzer, gave
her pocket money to pay her own way and not let boyfriends pay for her. She learnt early in life, to be independent
and adopted the philosophy that “women don’t owe men anything.”
Hetzer recalls looking at her father’s photos
and journals when she was about age 5 and how excited and inspired she was by
the tales he told about his adventures in Egypt and Majorca.
Hetzer aims to replicate the journey by Clarenore Stinnes, the first woman to circumnavigate the world, 1927 - 1929 |
The sight of her father riding a motorcycle,
with his wife seated in the sidecar in their 1929 photos, left a lasting
impression on her.
Hetzer learned to ride the motorcycle
when she was 14 and competed in her first race at the tender age of 16 on a NSU
Lambretta motor scooter.
She was shy but
undeterred even though she was the only girl in the class for mechanics. In the early 60s she worked at a Chevrolet
dealership in the US before returning to work at her father’s Opel dealership
in Berlin. She eventually took over the
family business on his demise in 1969.
Hetzer and Hudo with friends from MSVCR and Pirakash, the mechanic, at One-Stop Classic & Sports Garage, JB |
Then she
began to collect old cars and proudly told me that she paid for them
herself. She used to have 25 vintage
cars but now has 13 – all of them convertibles.
Two years ago, she bought Hudo, a 1930 8-cylinder Hudson Great Eight
classic and started to prepare for her adventure of a lifetime.
Hetzer greatly admired Clarenore
Stinnes, the first woman to circumnavigate the world driving an Adler Standard
6 from 1927 to 1929 and she aims to replicate her journey around the world. In July 2014 she was flagged off from Berlin
and plans to complete her 2-year adventure in June 2016.
After leaving JB, Hudo will be packed in a
container and shipped from Singapore to Perth where Hetzer will continue her
adventure across Australia before leaving to drive through New Zealand.
Hetzer with more friends from MSVCR at Straits View Hotel JB, before she left for Singapore |
The car will then be shipped to California
where she will traverse the US and head to South America before going to Africa
and finally to Spain, France and back home to Berlin.
Temporary Setbacks
After six months on the road, Hetzer, a
mother to two adult children and four grandchildren (with one on the way),
often missed home. But when she experienced
help from others and offered help to others during her travels, she didn’t feel
so sad.
She stays in touch with her
daughter, Marla, with regular updates and told me she couldn’t help getting
emotional when her grandchild said, “Oma
Heidi, I’d like to hug you! Why are you
so far away?”
Hetzer atop Hudo on a flatbed truck, being towed to Jesada Technik Museum, Bangkok, Thailand |
This
left the position vacant but she soon received more than 150 applicants and finally
a 25-year old photographer who only held a motorcycle license, was picked.
“That way, he won’t take hold of the wheel!”
she said.
But four days into the trip, they parted ways.
But four days into the trip, they parted ways.
Rally drivers know
that it’s not easy to find a suitable companion so Hetzer had two other
companions before she continued alone from Bukhara in Uzbekistan and in Laos,
she was joined by a son of a Berlin friend who lives in Vientiane, for 32 days.
Some countries like Iran, Azerbaijan
and China require drivers to obtain a permit and guide so she was not always
alone.
Hetzer and Hudo suffered freezing
-21 deg C cold of the Krygyz Mountains at 3750m above sea level in an attempt
to enter China by the Tourugart Pass but were forced to wait in Almaty,
Kazakhstan, for a special permit required for Hudo to be issued from Berlin!
This obstacle was compounded by the age 69
limit for her to apply for a Chinese driver’s license because Htzer was 77. Thankfully she had a resourceful Chinese
guide who helped her to enter China by an alternative crossing but it was 500km
further and much, much colder!
Hudo is a 1930 8-cylinder Hudson Great Eight Classic |
When Hudo had engine trouble in Bangkok, she
received help from Jesada Technik Museum who connected her with MSVCR in
Malaysia.
She enjoyed warm Malaysian
hospitality with Douglas Fox and MSVCR Northern Region members in Georgetown and
after she bade farewell to Johnny Chandnani in Kuala Lumpur, she left for JB on
Thursday evening escorted by Surjit and Liew in Liew’s 1972 Volkswagen
Safari.
Hetzer was delighted with the way
friendly motorists honked and waved when they saw Hudo on the North-South Highway.
In JB, MSVCR Southern Region members were
waiting to welcome her but at 10.30pm Luke received a call to inform that Hudo
had broken down near Macap, about 67km from JB.
Rather than calling for a tow service, Surjit and Liew rigged Hudo to
Liew’s VW Safari and towed it to Straits View Hotel, Johor Baru and to the garage
the next morning.
Living Her Dream
Clarenore Stinnes was only 26 when she
drove around the world in 1927 but Hetzer is 77 and yet they are equally
hard-headed and determined to achieve their goals.
Hetzer is glad that roads are comparatively better
now and modern technology, supported by good internet connections enables her to
stay in touch with others. She hopes
that she will be a good example to motivate women and children to set goals and
aim to achieve them.
In Kosovo, Vietnam
and Laos, Hetzer was invited to speak to schoolgirls and her message to them is:
“If I can do it, you can do it!”
The writer with Hetzer and Hudo before they left JB for Singapore |
“Most people dream
about it, talk about it but don’t do it.”
Her encouragement is not to just dream but to live your dream. “I’m living my dream!” she declared.
In spite of the ups and downs, Hetzer is
buoyed up by the friendship and goodwill she experienced with people,
particularly vintage car owners, in her journey so far.
“We have a common love for old cars – this is
our bond and money does not play a role,” she said.
From Kazakhstan to Johor Baru, mechanics who have
put Hudo back on the road told her, “It was an honour to have worked on your
car.”
Likewise, it was an honour for me to
meet this special lady and I join my friends in MSVCR to wish her well as she leaves
Singapore and South East Asia for the next leg of her world tour with faithful
Hudo.
Follow Heidi Hetzer around the
world on (English translation) website: http://heidi-um-die-welt.com/
A version of this article was published in The New Sunday Times, Life & Times on 8 February 2015
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