Part
and parcel of Penduka Safaris are the green 4x4 International
vehicles, designed and built by Penduka’s founder
Izak Barnard.
He fondly refers to them as his “Karre”
Over the past three
decades, while driving his International 4x4’s,
Izak Barnard has been stopped countless times
by traffic officials. The opening line is always
the same: “Sorry to stop you, but I just
had to look at your vehicle. I’ve never
seen something like this
in my life.”
Izak Barnard 68, is the founder of the oldest
safari company in Southern Africa, Penduka Safaris,
which was established in the early 1960’s.
Izak designed his first double-cab
bakkie in the mid 1970’s, long before double
cabs became fashionable.
Today Penduka has a fleet of 14 Internationals
comprising of:
Three 14 seater buses, three 8 seater triple cabs,
one 5 seater double cab, a 15 seater open game
drive vehicle , three mobile kitchens and three
pick up trucks with trailers.
“Altogether the trucks must have done more
than five or six million kilometers. Some individual
units have more than one million kilometers on
the clock,” says Izak.
After using a Jeep bakkie and a nine seater Jeep
station wagon on his first safaris back in the
Sixties, Izak decided the Jeeps were not strong
enough for his needs.
He then considered Land Rovers. “But they
were too narrow for the twin track sand roads
and could not carry the loads we needed to carry.
I then worked out exactly what I wanted and made
a frame model of my idea. I considered leg space
and then extended the chassis. I wanted the windows
to be big and high for game viewing, with the
frame strong enough in case of accidents,”
Izak explained.
With this in mind, he bought his first 1968 International
cab at a scrap yard in Windhoek, and the axles
and chassis somewhere else.
As he didn’t have the necessary equipment
then, his first International 14 seater bus was
built under his supervision and with his help
at Nic Smuts Auto Body Conversions in Randfontein
in the early 1970’s, where he had earlier
rebuilt the nine seater Jeep station wagon.
It took only one safari for Izak to fall in love
with Internationals. He has since acquired all
the necessary equipment and the conversions are
being done in the workshop on his farm.
Through the years his unique
international
collection expanded.
Visiting the workshops on the farm, you will
possibly find one of these internationals being
stripped down to the last nut for a ‘full
service’ and a re-spray. On one side of
the workshop the assistants will be working on
the chassis and the axles, while on the other
side the body will be prepared for a re-spray
or the interior for an upgrade.
Although the Internationals are considered “old”,
the team continuously comes up with the new ideas
and improvements. The latest internationals are
fitted with comfortable bucket seats and new durable
waterproof flooring. Additional black paint is
added here and there. But the internationals have
always had enough legroom, racks for books or
cameras, large windows, hatches, steps by which
to get in and out of the high vehicle and more
than enough engine power.
All the vehicles were built from old internationals
bought at scrap yards or from auctions. Izak stores
more than enough second hand bodies and other
parts such as fenders, gearboxes, steering wheels,
axles and doors to make up a few more Internationals.
He has nearly 25 engines in stock and enough parts
for 10 or so more engines. The parts are normally
obtained from US connections in Johannesburg or
sometimes imported directly form the US.
“There is nothing on the market that can
replace these trucks,” Izak says firmly.
“In America the Ford F350 Ultra duty with
a V8 International diesel engine is equal to my
304’s, but it’s not available in South
Africa. All Izak’s Internationals were rebuilt
from the 1310 series. They are powered by five
litre V8 engines and equipped with four speed
T19 gearboxes and new process transfer cases.
Each international has four petrol tanks with
a total capacity of 350 to 400 litres. Depending
on road conditions, the fuel consumption ranges
from 3, 0 to 5, 5 Km’s / L
On the first day of a safari, clients sometimes
look down their noses at the Internationals, which
don’t come with the modern racing stripes,
socially correct stickers or glittery metallic
paint. However after a few days in grueling sand,
after seeing other tourists cramped up in uncomfortable
safari vehicles and realizing the full extent
of the equipment loaded for a luxury safari, their
view of Izak’s Internationals changes forever.
Published: Leisure Wheels January 2002
Author Lientjie Maré