I hate to break the news to you, but it's gone main stream. SM is no longer an exclusive configuration for Florida cave divers. Link from todays SDI/TDI News letter.
International Training :: Associate Member eNews :: Sidemount? it?s not just for cave divers any more :: English
It's gone more mainstream than SDI/TDI - Alert Diver Summer 2010 issue includes a four page article entitled "Sidemount - Not just for cave divers anymore". Of course by its nature Alert Diver is received by every vacation diver (including me) maintaining DAN dive insurance. Am I to believe that every vacation diver exposed to the concept will now rush into a cave?
As others have said, example is far more persuasive. My daughter and I decided that we wanted to dive in the cenotes as we vacation in Mexico regularly; I told her I would love to, but only after competing cavern certification. We paid dearly in vacation time to gain the skills over three long days so that we could safely enjoy it
next time. While going through line drills on land and in the water, we were passed by group after group of OW divers entering the cavern with a guide (who I assume is full cave certified). Many of the same questions I have read throughout this thread went through my mind - what happens if 2 or more of the OW divers have a problem while deep in the cavern?
My daughter, on the other hand, immediately asked a far scarier question. Why were we wasting our vacation time doing drills, following line around tie-offs with no mask (in OW), penetrating into the cavern only to drill all the way out sharing air, lights off, and eyes closed unable to enjoy the cavern we want to see, while so many were just jumping in with no preparation? It was difficult for me to deal with her natural teenaged impatience and convince her that ours was the better route; that we would gain from our work and be repaid with a better appreciation and greater enjoyment of the cavern dives we would do at some unknown point in the future. Better safety as well of course, but a hard sell to a 16 year old.
We completed our course (although our NACD certs have not gone through...... but that's another story) and are planning to return to the caverns next year. And we have learned more fully just why the training is so important.
If my daughter is ever so foolish as to exceed her training into the cave zone it will not be with me as a buddy, and will not be because of the overhead training we have received so far. It will be because someone else sets a bad example, and leads her down a potentially deadly path by making the shortcut seem OK. I would never want her to see OW divers entering a "safe" cave like the tunnel down to the piano room at Vortex; at least not until she is a bit more mature - but that did not mean I did not think she should learn beginner overhead skills in cavern. Her skills will not lead her beyond into the cave zone, but the wrong diver could, I fear. I also trust that at some point she will learn to resist such temptations (but as a parent will always worry, of course).
I drive a 437hp Camaro SS - and have not gotten a ticket in 8 years. If we learn SM, we will not use it as an excuse to explore the first underwater crack we see. And if we ever decide to continue to cave, it will be after learning doubles in open water first, if not SM.