Trois-Rivières: calm, confident, safety-first riding starts here
If you’re stressed about test day, you’re not alone. This page is built to reduce anxiety by making things predictable: what happens, what to bring, and how to avoid the most common mistakes — with a safety-first mindset.
What happens on test day (simple timeline)
- Arrive early so you’re not making rushed decisions under pressure.
- Check-in & documents (ID, paperwork, whatever the registry requires).
- Bike + gear check: the examiner confirms roadworthiness + safety basics.
- Road test: focus on smooth, safe control — not speed or “impressing.”
- Wrap-up: results, feedback, and you’re done.
The “don’t panic” checklist
- Your required ID and registry paperwork
- Any confirmation details for your appointment
- Time buffer (arrive early)
- Proper helmet
- Jacket + gloves
- Long pants
- Closed-toe boots (ideally riding boots)
- Slow breathing before you start
- Ride smooth, not “fast”
- Look where you want to go (head up)
- If you make a small mistake — reset and continue calmly
Weather & reschedules
Weather can change fast. If the registry reschedules due to conditions, the goal is that nobody gets penalized — especially if nobody has checked in yet. Safety > forcing a test.
- If you get a reschedule call/text, communicate early.
- Don’t wait until the last minute if conditions are clearly unsafe.
- Rebook calm. Ride safe.
For mentors in Trois-Rivières
Mentors help by making test day calm and predictable. You’re not an instructor, and you’re not “coaching during the test.” Road tests are booked under the assumption the test-taker has already practiced riding. Mentors can offer calm reassurance and a few common-sense pointers through in-app messaging — but we recommend no teaching sessions and no last-minute “training” on test day. Bookings are short, and mentors are compensated for being prepared, punctual, and professional (details are inside the app).
- Argue with examiners or push unsafe choices
- Encourage riding beyond comfort or conditions
- Provide riding lessons or “practice sessions” (the road test assumes prior practice)
- Make promises about outcomes (“you’ll pass”) — nobody can guarantee that