Fuel Relief on 2 Wheels

Georgina used to treat the petrol station like a necessary evil. Every Thursday morning, same routine—pull in, sigh at the price board, fill up anyway. Lately though, the rising fuel prices had started to feel overwhelming. Enough to make her wonder if staying home was easier than going anywhere at all.

One morning, while waiting for the pump to slowly drain the last of her pension money, she noticed another woman about her age riding past on an e-bike. Relaxed posture, steady pace, not a hint of strain. The rider even gave a small wave as she passed.

Georgina watched her go and thought, “She looked happy.”

The idea stayed with her.

A week later, Georgina booked a test ride.

What surprised her wasn’t the speed—it was how easy everything felt. The motor didn’t do the work for her; it simply took the edge off. Hills felt manageable. Distances seemed shorter. By the time she rode back home, she wasn’t exhausted. She was curious.

Before long, curiosity became routine.

Short car trips disappeared first. The local library became a peaceful ride instead of a frustrating drive. The community pool, somewhere she hadn’t visited in years, suddenly felt close enough to enjoy regularly. Nearby parks became places to stop and spend time rather than just drive past.

Her car started spending more time in the driveway.

The savings on petrol certainly helped, but it became about more than money. It was the freedom of getting out without worrying about traffic, parking, or fuel costs. It was staying active without overdoing it. It was independence.

One afternoon at the park, another retiree mentioned how expensive everything had become—fuel, registration, insurance.

Georgina smiled and shared something she’d recently discovered.

“I rang my insurance company,” she said. “Told them I’m hardly using the car anymore because I ride my e-bike most days. They reduced my premium because my yearly kilometres are much lower now.”

The woman looked surprised. “I never even thought of that.”

Most people hadn’t.

It became one of Georgina’s simple pieces of advice: if your car is being used less, make sure your insurance reflects it. Small savings matter.

Fuel prices never really came down. The signs at the servo kept climbing.

But Georgina no longer felt trapped by them.

These days, she rides past the petrol station on her way to the library, the pool, or the park—moving at her own pace, with enough spare change left over for an ice cream on the way home.

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