It really depends on what you do next.I think you misunderestimate me[sic]
Riddle me this:
Who is more reckless, ignorant and stupid? A diver who sees a cave, gets an idea in the middle of a dive, and goes in or a diver who sees a cave and has an idea to go in, goes home and starts pulling up maps and charts, videos of other people diving that particular cave and even posts on a forum to get the "lay of the land" from people who have been in that particular cave before, wades through all the useless replies like yours, gets the gems of good information about the cave, then armed with that information makes an informed decision whether or not to just go ahead and do it, or take a cavern class before doing it, or whether to do it at all?
No, it probably won't be me you read about drowning in the devils ear next month or next year, it will be the guy who is sitting around now thinking about something completely different and will have the same idea I did but instead of researching he will just do it.
If you decide to take a class then you made a good choice. However the less obvious risk here is that you read a lot of stuff, study a lot of maps and delude yourself into thinking you are really prepared. If you do that what will determine whether or not you die will mostly be luck.
I don't believe in or rely on luck as I've come to realize that the more I train and the more experience I gain, the less I ever have to rely on luck.
---------- Post added November 20th, 2012 at 02:36 PM ----------
Don't get me wrong I agree with you when it comes to cave training. And in reality the price differences we are talking about are $50-$100 bucks per class. They are not major differences or savings, and certainly not enough for a diver to use as the basis for a decision.DA, you are right, but shopping for a bargain basement price is not a good idea either. Interview instructors. Talk to everyone you can. Then make your decision. Cost should not play in to it. However I still stand by my statement of if an instructor does not value their time, I do not value it. Of course that is a generalization though.
I advise most divers looking for an instructor to find one with a philosophy and teaching style they are comfortable with and use that as the primary basis for their selection.
Where I get a little peeved is in the often $1500 plus cost for normoxic and hypoxic trimix classes where the academics are minimal, the bottle management skills have already been taught at the AN/DP level (if you took a 2 deco gas class), and where only 3-4 dives are involved for each course. Both courses should not cost more than $2,000 in total.
One could argue that AN/DP should cost more and I have no issue with that, but gouging at the trimix level is a bit counter productive.