Citroen 2CVs fans to tour North Island for model's 70th

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1976 Citroen 2CV 'Sport'. Photos / Citroen Museum

1976 Citroen 2CV 'Sport'. Photos / Citroen Museum

Next month 20 little French cars will raid the North Island - starting in Whanganui.

The cars are Citroen 2CVs and David Gerrie and two friends have organised the driving trip with other enthusiasts to coincide with the first public release of the car 70 years ago.

Of the 20 cars making the trip, which starts on October 5 and ends on October 9, one of them was made in 1956 and a couple of others are from the 70s. Gerrie said the car was made to help motorise the large number of farmers still using horses and carts in 1930s France.

Read more: Trusty Citroen 2CV takes on truckies

1954 Citroen 2CV
"It's a very comfortable and easy car to drive. It's basic. Not much can go wrong with it.

"The features of the car - how did they advertise it? They used to say it had central locking [because] you can reach all the doors from the driver's seat.

"Four perfectly round wheels - one on each corner. It's air cooled - there's no radiator and no worries about running out of radiator water.

The group leave Whanganui on October 5 at 9:30am and arrive for their first overnight stop in Waitara. They then travel to Tokaanu where they will celebrate the make's 70th birthday.

The following day they head south to Raetihi and then a little farther south turning east to travel the Whangaehu river road then the Turakina river road to Papanui Junction School.

The group then heads east to Mangaweka for their penultimate stop. On their final day of driving the little Citroens wil travel Peep O'Day Rd down to Hunterville, then across to Whanganui.

They will mostly take back roads - something Gerrie said the cars were especially made for.

"It was designed for the peasantry of France over roads that were really horse and cart roads.

"It's got a very high clearance. It's got an extremely long suspension movement. The jack to jack it up is nearly a metre long. It's perfect for the back roads, the bumpy roads, the rutted roads - it can go anywhere that a four-wheeled drive would go except of course up slippery, steep slopes. In terms of clearance and bumps ... it's pretty good."

Gerrie said while they didn't have a formal club - there was a great 2CV community.

"It leads to lots of friends. It's not just the car I suppose - it's the people that sort of hold it together. The 2CV owners, we don't actually have a club, we just know each other and keep in touch.

"It's fun and the people who drive them have fun with them."

-Whanganui Chronicle