The grief-stricken dad of the Australian bicyclist killed by an accused boozed-up driver near Central Park has revealed the heartbreaking last conversation he had with his daughter.

“Our girl was on the trip of a lifetime, and she’d only spoken to me I think the previous day … and said, ‘Dad, can you believe your little girl is in New York City?’ ” teary-eyed dad Andrew Lyden told Tasmania’s Southern Cross News. “For her to be taken from us in such a horrific way is gut-wrenching. Words can’t describe how heartbreaking this is.”

Madison Jane Lyden, 23, was pedaling along Central Park West near West 67th Street around 4:40 p.m. Friday when an Uber strayed into the bike lane, forcing her to swerve out of the way, according to authorities.

Lyden veered into the neighboring lane, where she was run over by a private sanitation truck.

She died at Roosevelt Hospital.

The truck’s driver, Felipe Chairez, was hit with a slew of charges, including DWI, after cops found three empty beer cans inside his truck and he admitted to drinking two, prosecutors charge.

The 44-year-old Long Island man’s lawyer claimed at a Saturday arraignment that alcohol wasn’t a factor in the crash — because Chairez scarfed down a chicken-salad sandwich before getting behind the wheel, sopping up the alcohol.

Chairez was released without bail.

Lyden, a recent college grad with her heart set on going into psychology, was seeing the world with a close friend when her life was cut short, her mourning mom told Southern Cross News.

“She was applying for masters this year, and she’s just been traveling the world with her best friend, having the adventure of a lifetime,” Amanda Berry told the outlet.

“Madison was a beautiful, beautiful daughter. She was loyal and loving,” added her father. “I used to call her our star, and she was a star.”

Lyden also left behind a twin sister, who was at a loss for words to describe the depths of her heartbreak.

“I don’t really know where to begin on what Madison meant to me and our family,” Paige Lyden told the outlet.