Clearly you are under some misapprehension as to my point, either you are deliberately misreading my point, or you have not read my posts.
Wandering off in to the woods on a three week vacation, with a knife a kettle and a blanket is ok, as a holiday, a short stop, knowing full well that youre a day or two walk from a road and civilisation. but it's nothing like the real thing
I don't believe I have misread your posts. Your point, consistently, is that people who deliberately put themselves in a position of privation are foolish.
It's as if you view the entire story of history as the search for comfort. And while that's an element of history, it's not the backbone of it in the grand sweep of things.
And my point is that history is replete with examples of people who willingly and knowingly set comfort aside to try something different for goals that you might find elusive, but are valid nonetheless.
Heck, the entire story of the New World is defined by just that choice, whether you're talking about Europeans 500 years ago, Simon Kenton in Kentucky or Mexican immigrants today.
And you're *not* defending the "plucky natives" (your words, not mine) by suggesting that their background was filled with suffering and darkness and misery until (presumably) European comfort arrived to save them. Your viewpoint -- couched in the sneering references to "rose-tinted glasses" -- is a classic failure Euro-centrism. Comfort above all! Our style of comfort!
Your idea of the "plucky native" living in squalor and yearning to be set on the path to central heating simply was not the case with huge swatches of native people -- including most in the New World. That's not to say some of their lives weren't hard, but many were not (particularly in the context of their cultures). Your cultural bias is showing.
Besides you muddy the water by co-mingling observations about poverty with observations about native people. Poverty is a different issue -- some natives were well off and some poor and yes, the poor ones did year for a change. And that change generally involved choosing, for some period of time, to endure privation.
What we're talking about here is being willing to set aside comfort in order to accomplish other things in life. That's a choice many have made and for reasons both noble (and, yes, sometimes greedy) throughout history. But it is not foolish nor naive and it should be respected.
And if you think it was population pressure that lead the Vikings to set sail or the Mongols to ride, you're utterly mistaken... The main point is (for the purposes of the discussion at hand), that they willingly set aside the comfort you so vigorously guard because they had other goals (sometimes booty, sometimes simply curiosity) in mind.
Comfort is not the supreme expression of the human story, it's simply a nice side benefit.
But it is one that can be over rated.