Walmart came up with a clever idea when it began welcoming RVs to set up for the night in it’s parking lots. They successfully banked on the prospect of increasing their business and that is especially true for those Walmarts open 24 hours. You always need something and where are you going to go ? Why, Walmart, of course, and it’s mere steps away. The Walmart in Rivière du Loup was packed, as pictured, when we cycled past it this morning at around 7:45. Several groups of people were headed for its’ front doors. 
Tonight we are planning on camping outside a Metro Grocery Store. It says “Bievenu aux campeurs”. Which means “Welcome To Campers.” We know they don’t really mean tent campers like us, but we are going there anyway. We’ll just wait a bit until it starts to get dark and then we’ll set the tent up behind the side wall near the tree. We will probably be the only campers there tonight. Their “Bievenu a Campeurs” sign doesn’t seem to be working well for them.
Last night at the grocery store strawberries were on sale! Quart baskets overbrimming with sweet goodness were selling for $1 a basket. Who can make money on that? Had I been home there would soon have been a jam session, but as they are so perishable, we bought 1 basket and enjoyed them all this morning with our cereal. They were from L’Isle d’Orleon, which is mid Fleuve St Laurent, across from Levis, Quebec. So good! 
The route leading out of Rivière du Loup, Quebec to Edmunston, NB can be either straight up a long, demoralizing hill, or along a series of switchbacks that also lead to the summit and beyond. We took the second option. It was still work but we were both still breathing at the top, and that’s what counts. From the top we took the Petit Temis route. This is the oldest bike path in Quebec and it is interprovincial, joining Quebec with New Brunswick. Lightly gravelled, I viewed it with some skepticism initially, but soon adjusted to its texture. Still, it takes much longer and more work to push your way along a gravel path than it does to be on a smoothly paved road. But today we had the wind with us! And what a wind it was! We were stopped at one point and we watched how the wind was causing the grain fields to ripple and flow. I remarked that it was mesmerizing, kind of like watching the ocean.
It was not warm outside; Charlie said it was “like riding through a sunny fridge”.
The bike paths are generally away from the towns and while we wouldn’t want to be off and away from towns all the time, the scenery today was beautiful. Petit Temis is an old railway line made over into a cycling path. There are trees, bushes, flowers, farmers fields, impenetrable forests, rock faces, creeks, rivers and lakes. 




Dotted along the way are benches, picnic tables and west of where we are now, free wild camping areas. We planned to make it to here but secretly I’d hoped to get into New Brunswick by the end of today. It’s 40km away. The spirit was willing but the flesh knows what’s good for it.
Tims, our quiet refuge, where we are alone together and where we catch up on email and often blog, is where we are currently stationed.
We had our dinner outside of the Metro Grocery Store. Canned beans, cold, with shredded cabbage mixed with canned peas and doused with coleslaw dressing and a pita. All washed down with a lemonade Bacardi Breezer. It’s getting dark. I’m going to go wash out the container we mixed our salad in and while I’m in there, I’ll clean my teeth and wash up as best and as fast as I can. We will make our way back to the Metro and set up our tent. It’s green. It blends in with everything. And there is a sign outside that says, “Bievenu aux Campeurs”.
Goodnight and God Bless You All.



























































