I nearly talked myself out of this thread because I’m about to make myself look 
really stupid, but it was so funny that I’m doing it anyway. 

I’ve been somewhat of a mess my whole Biking Life. I adored bikes, always, but 
I never had a proper bike education or a nice bike until 2012. I was born to 
the least mechanically-inclined parents on earth, and my mom was more 
proficient than my dad. I grew up riding the worst bike you can imagine, always 
with nearly-flat tires. Maybe once a year, usually in spring, Dad would haul my 
bike to the gas station and fill the tires with air. It was like riding on 
clouds. But eventually, my tires would lose air again and I’d have to wait 
until next year. Not that I’d notice anything was amiss - I was too busy riding 
barefoot all over small town North Dakota, falling out of trees, eating penny 
candy from the bowling alley and building forts. Tires, what tires. 

I grew up, went to college, met and married my husband, who grew up on a farm. 
We moved across the country with almost nothing and started our life and 
careers. My farmer father-in-law came to visit and outfitted our garage with 
tools he thought mandatory, including an air compressor. I think it was my 27th 
birthday that my husband told me he wanted to get me a bike. I knew just the 
one, it was *really* expensive at $125, but it was my birthday and I would get 
the best: A blue Schwinn Sidewinder from the local Walmart. 

While he was visiting, my FIL (again, a farmer and not a bike rider) noticed my 
bike tires were pathetically low. Of course I hadn’t noticed; flat tires were 
de rigueur for me! He filled them with the air compressor, pushed on the tire 
and declared it good. And from then on, that was how I did it. 

I’ve heard you all talk about your supple tires and not wanting them rock hard, 
and I knew *I* had supple tires because when I squeezed them, there was a tiny 
but perceptible give to the rubber. I mean, that’s what you all meant, right? 
So I made sure I never filled my tires very fully because supple tires were the 
ticket.

I ended up with a floor pump last year. It has a gauge that tells you “how much 
pressure you runnin’”. I have started using it lately and began to pay 
attention to what my tire pressure was. 20-25. Huh. I remember folks discussing 
tire pressure and I didn’t recall theirs being so low. So, I asked Joe, who 
seems to answer most of the questions on the List and doesn’t seem to resent 
it. He (through fits of laughter at his keyboard, I’m sure) said that yes, I 
actually should be pumping up my tires to a certain number and that yes, they 
would feel rock hard, and no, squeezing them is not a good test, and indeed I 
would not explode my Big Bens (with max psi of 70) if I filled them to 55 psi. 

I was today years old when I learned that your tires are *supposed* to feel 
rock hard and be filled to an actual number. I was today years old when I 
learned that my “supple tires” were just tires that were low on air. 

Who else has managed to miss the obvious when it comes to bike stuff? 

Leah, who would like you to know she is smart at other things. Just not bike 
things. 

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