It may not seem like it, but you'd be surprised (or maybe not) at how little effort it takes to "pop a wheelie" while taxiing. Leaving the yoke full forward or neutral can put a lot of weight on the wheel in some airplanes.
Would be pretty hard in my nose-heavy 182... Ha.
See W&B chart...
I worked for a large flight school in the mid 70's as a CFI. We had a small fleet of 150's as primary trainers. We always taught the students to keep the yoke back while taxiing. The reason was simple...the abused 150's had constant problems with nose wheel shimmy.
I'm I the only one who finds this quite normal?
Cessna nose wheel drivers probably "get it" more than anyone in this thread. It's just hard on crap up there to bang the nose gear over things.
And once you've had to PAY for a Cessna nose strut fix of any sort, you'll tend to treat them a lot nicer. Stuff wears out when abused.
Of course at least some subset of mechanics don't repair/understand Cessna nose wheel shimmy problems correctly, either. They'll keep messing with the shimmy dampener over and over, for some reason, you see this in rental airplane logs a lot, and never find the worn out part that's actually causing the problem. I have no idea why. I saw that personally with more than one Skyhawk, and different maintenance shops, back when I rented.
Seemed like a quick and dirty way to make it look like "something was done" in the squawk book, and hell, for all I knew (or any renter knows without asking the mechanic themselves) maybe the owners were told it wouldn't fix the problem and they were being cheap and wouldn't authorize a solid repair, to keep the thing flying instead of being down for a while to tear into the nose gear and see what was really wrong.
As a tailwheel pilot from the beginning its best to keep the stick (wheel) back in a tailwheel plane unless its windy. Show the top of the control surface to the wind was the thing I was taught.
Brings up an interesting side comment. Flying with a very new pilot friend once I realized that during "flight controls free and correct" he didn't know which way the ailerons should move without thinking about it. I showed him the thumb trick... (Grab yoke with hand opposite the aileron you're looking at, and stick your thumb straight up. Twist yoke toward that aileron and it should also go up. In a stick, just know the direction you move it is the side that will go up...)
Maybe I saved him from killing himself in a mis-rigged airplane someday. Dunno. I've certainly read that accident story a few times.
But he knows today how to check the fanged ailerons go the right direction. So he's got that going for him now.
Also know two people who've fought mis-rigged trim wheels and electric trim in two newer Cessnas in flight. I was taught to pull the yoke into my lap and look at the trim tab to see if it was in a reasonable position for takeoff back there, but not whether or not it moved the correct direction.
Your "show the top to the wind" made me think of these things. Some pilots couldn't tell ya without thinking about it, which one will go up if you turn the yoke right or left. Not all pilots of course, but if you need to do it in a hurry, it's better to know...
Elevator is a little easier for most folks to pick the correct movement for some reason.