I posted this in the Basic Scuba Discussions, since I am anticipating that this thread will go in the direction of turning new divers away from caves. I myself am not cave certified yet (but working on it), so I will not offer any insight into the training and equipment needed for safely conducting cave dives, but that is not the point of this post anyway, the point is what draws a certified diver that is not cave certified into a cave.
I have to think that the draw is likely based on what drew the diver to scuba diving in the first place, exploring the unknown. I think divers tend to be adventurous types, however I have read far more stories of certified divers diving in caves than non-certified divers trying scuba diving. I will agree that my premise is not rock solid, perhaps I am reading the wrong forums so not finding the stories of non-certified divers. So feel free to attack my premise as well as anything else in this post...I have pretty thick skin
Why is it then that people that want to try scuba diving generally feel the need to seek out training, and then once trained feel that should be able to pull off a cave dive without further training?
I have read a lot of discussions where people voice their opinions on specialty classes from agencies as being cash grabs and not really worth it. Perhaps some divers lump cave training in with this, thinking that in the class they would learn some simple tasks such as tying a line at the entrance, and using it to get back out. I have to admit, it does sound pretty simple, doesn't it?
Perhaps some of these divers are reading discussions about cave diving with respect to proper trim and buoyancy, and think they have the skills necessary to complete the dive safely. I thought I had pretty good buoyancy and trim, until I started preparing for my upcoming GUE Fundamentals class and tried to maintain buoyancy and trim while task loading (it wasn't pretty the first few times, but getting better).
Then again, perhaps they don't think about it at all and just get caught up in the moment, proceeding into a cave.
I have to think that the draw is likely based on what drew the diver to scuba diving in the first place, exploring the unknown. I think divers tend to be adventurous types, however I have read far more stories of certified divers diving in caves than non-certified divers trying scuba diving. I will agree that my premise is not rock solid, perhaps I am reading the wrong forums so not finding the stories of non-certified divers. So feel free to attack my premise as well as anything else in this post...I have pretty thick skin

Why is it then that people that want to try scuba diving generally feel the need to seek out training, and then once trained feel that should be able to pull off a cave dive without further training?
I have read a lot of discussions where people voice their opinions on specialty classes from agencies as being cash grabs and not really worth it. Perhaps some divers lump cave training in with this, thinking that in the class they would learn some simple tasks such as tying a line at the entrance, and using it to get back out. I have to admit, it does sound pretty simple, doesn't it?
Perhaps some of these divers are reading discussions about cave diving with respect to proper trim and buoyancy, and think they have the skills necessary to complete the dive safely. I thought I had pretty good buoyancy and trim, until I started preparing for my upcoming GUE Fundamentals class and tried to maintain buoyancy and trim while task loading (it wasn't pretty the first few times, but getting better).
Then again, perhaps they don't think about it at all and just get caught up in the moment, proceeding into a cave.