AN 82-YEAR-OLD great-grandmother has been given a new lease of life thanks to a bike library.

Alice Wilson, from Pickering, relied on her bike for transport but was devastated after being forced to stop cycling when she became partially blind four years ago.

She had given up hope of cycling again, until she met Rob Brown from Scarborough and Ryedale Community Cycling, who introduced her to the Coast and Dale Yorkshire Bank Bike Library.

Run with Yorkshire Bank Bike Libraries (YBBL), along with charity Sight Support, the scheme offers blind people the opportunity to ride tandem on restored unwanted bikes.

The project has given Alice - who has seven children, 14 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren - the chance to fall in love with cycling again.

She said: “I have been partially sighted for four years, ever since my husband had a stroke. It was the pressure of looking after him that caused all the blood vessels to go wrong in my eye. I struggle with faces and when I realised my vision was going, I just cried and cried because I could hardly see until I had the laser treatment.

“I’ve never driven a car as I used to cycle everywhere. I didn’t want to give my bike up because it was my main means of transport, but it got taken away and I never saw it again. Then one day Rob was walking his dog and I was walking my guide dog. We started talking and he introduced me to the Yorkshire Bank Bike Library and asked if I would like to ride a tandem. I told him I would love to and I’ve done it ever since. It’s wonderful to be back on a bike and we went to Leeds and did about 20 miles on one of my first rides. It felt like I had my freedom back and just being able to hold the handle bars again was great.”

There are 57 donation stations across Yorkshire where unwanted bikes are donated and refurbished for use across 61 libraries where people who don’t have access to a bike can borrow one for free.

The project was launched after the 2014 Tour de France Grand Départ in Yorkshire - in addition to Yorkshire Bank sponsoring the Tour de Yorkshire since the first race in 2015.

So far more than 6,000 bikes have been cleaned up, repaired avoided landfill and are now available for children and families to borrow for a range of activities.