We do this one all the time! I won't bother giving my personal preferences yet again, for once I'll give a different answer...
I did several training camps on the Costa Blanca and we always had mechanics at the hotel to sort out any mechanical problems for us. There was always a track pump for us to use at the front of the hotel before we set off.
One year, I watched rider after rider putting 120 psi into their tyres, but I'd noticed that the mechanic had a red marker on the pressure gauge set at around 6.5 bar (95 psi). I had a word with him about it...
He told me that though some of the main roads we went on had a good quality surface, we also used many roads that were pretty awful. (Much like UK roads in fact!) At 120 psi, most of the suspension action of the tyres was lost. Tyres that have bounced off the road surface on rough descents are not a lot of fun, and not very safe. He recommended that we run our tyres at 6.5 bar which is why he'd marked that on the pump. Every year he would tell people this, but they would ignore him and pump their tyres rock hard. They'd limp back to the hotel later with bits hanging off their bikes due to the battering they had taken. Sometimes, riders actually had the bars shaken from their hands on descents and crashed. They wouldn't listen. Hard tyres = good, harder tyres = better, rock hard tyres = best!
That mechanic had worked with pro teams for over 10 years. He knew what he was talking about. Still, don't listen to people like me, or him. Put as much air in as you can!
(Oh, go on then - I weigh 15+ stone (95+ kg) , I ride 23C tyres, and I put approximately 6.5 bar (95 psi) in the rear, 6.0 bar (87 psi) in the front. I get one snakebite puncture every 2-3 years, if that. I never peel my tyres off the rims when cornering. I regularly descend at 50 mph without problems. My bike is reasonably comfortable on bad surfaces, and it rolls well.)