Elderly trike riders need volunteer 'pilots'
BBCA charity is appealing for volunteers to help its "unbelievably rewarding" work taking older and vulnerable people out for rides in specially adapted trishaws.
Cycling Without Age is an international charity with branches across the UK, which aims to bring joy to elderly people who, otherwise, would not get the opportunity to go for a ride.
The Oxfordshire branch has gone from having two trikes to nine in just ten months.
Leader of Cycling Without Age's Wallingford hub, Mick Heath said: "There are still a lot of black spaces where people need to get out and we need to get more volunteers, more money, more trikes, more rubber on the road".
One of the volunteer cyclists - known as "pilots" - Elaine Shepherd said: "It's unbelievably rewarding to take somebody out".
"They're in a care home, they can't get out so easily, they don't have a driving license, catching a bus isn't really an option... and we enable that.
"They can feel the wind in their hair - so they can be out in the fresh air, whatever the weather".
Victoria McWade recently became a volunteer after her father moved into a care home in Wallingford.
"It's just the most incredible thing ... to be able to bring him out of the care home and take him out into the countryside, to see the birds, to see the butterflies.
"It's just the freedom that we both love so much," she said.

Mick Heath said: "This is, by a country mile, the most rewarding thing I've done in my life. The impact it has on people's wellbeing is massive".
"We've grown very rapidly. From Oxford having two very quiet trikes in October 2025, we've now got nine busy trikes. We're continuing to grow fairly rapidly, in a controlled way".
"We need money to buy the trikes and volunteers to pedal them. Putting those two things together we can give everybody in Oxfordshire the right to feel the wind in their hair," he added.
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