How to Choose a Cave or Technical Diving Instructor
Cave and technical diving are quite different from recreational diving, and as such, so are the instructors that teach these highly advanced scuba diving courses.
There are several things you should always consider before you choose your instructor, and this guide will hopefully help you choose wisely.
Is your instructor an active diver?
- This is probably a bit of an odd question. If he/she is an instructor, obviously they are active divers, I mean, they are diving all the time, right? Well, not really. A lot of instructors pretty much only dive when/while they are in course. You could say that they’ve lost the passion for it. Maybe they are churning out one course after another, and the last thing in their mind is to go diving on their day off. SO be sure that you ask about their actual experience diving. Are they involved in any exploration projects? Conservation efforts? What kind of dives or which sites really get their engines going? If they won’t answer or you get an answer that is too vague or ambiguous well, I suggest you turn away.
How many courses do they do every year?
- Ideally, you want an instructor that is actively teaching courses at the level you want to train in. With TDI, all instructors are required to actively teach at their highest level on a regular basis, otherwise, we lose that level. Again, an instructor who is teaching [for example] 3 full cave courses per month might have a lot of experience teaching, however, there is no time in there for him/her to conducts dives of their own and actually go out and expand their skills, explore, and have fun.
What is their failure rate?
- Nobody wants to fail a course, and I assure you no instructor likes failing a student, but it does happen, and it should happen. Technical and cave diving are both highly demanding activities that require a lot -both physically and mentally-, and as such, not everybody is built for them. An instructor that has a really high failure rate is most likely doing a few things wrong him/herself. A very high failure rate either means that this instructor is not properly screening their students, or is not adequately teaching them, and expects them to be perfect with minimum effort on his/her part. On the other hand, a 100% passing rate means that the instructor is probably just handing out cards. We are educators, not magicians or miracle workers. And like I said before, not everybody is meant for this type of diving.
- Me personally, I have a failure rate of around 5-10%. However, keep in mind that even though someone might fail a course, it doesn’t mean I wash my hands of them. No. I will try to do everything I can to make sure the student is able to get over whatever is keeping him/her from passing. However, there is an issue with attitude. If you don’t have the right attitude for cave or technical diving, even if you have the highest developed skills ever known in the diving world, you will not pass until you get your ego and/or attitude in check.
How long have they been diving at this level?
- Here you should ask how long they have been diving. Not how long they have been teaching. Let me expand.
- A lot of instructors become instructors with very little actual diving experience. I am talking maybe a year or 2 after certification and a mere 100 logged dives. This is a trend (commonly known as “zero to hero”) that is unfortunately even invading the technical and cave diving world. We’ve seen instructors who have been diving at a full cave level for less than 2 years, and somehow managed to become cave instructors at some level (be it cavern, intro or even full cave!). Regardless of how many dives one can log in a 1 or 2 year period, it is my opinion that they still lack actual real-world experience. They’ve never had what I like to refer to as an “Oh, Sh-t!” moment. So how can they teach you if they themselves just passed the same course you are planning on taking such a short time ago?
- I think that an individual should have no less than 5 years of experience and several hundreds (if not more) of dives at the level they are planning on teaching before even considering the possibility of becoming an instructor. Otherwise, it just seems like they are trying to enlarge their ego, and are jumping from one certification to the next. Again, this is my opinion, and yours could differ, but I do believe you deserve better than to get “trained” by someone who doesn’t have enough experience yet.
Is the price too cheap?
- Technical and cave diving are expensive activities. All the equipment you need to do the dives you will train for will come with a price tag in the thousands (if not tens of thousands). While the majority of instructors love what we do for a living, we still have bills to pay, mortgages/rents, taxes, food, equipment repairs, etc., so a good course comes at a price.
- When a course is really cheap (and for technical and cave diving, anything less than $200-$250/day is really cheap), you have to ask yourself where those savings are coming from? Are corners being cut? Are you getting maybe just some really short dives just to meet standards so that the day ends early and the instructor can be home early and kick back? Are they properly servicing the equipment they are using or the equipment you are renting?
- A good instructor values their time, training and experience, and obviously, that is reflected in the price of a course.
Do you “click” with your instructor?
- Interview your instructor. After all, when you first make contact, your instructor is also interviewing you.
- Every instructor has a different style, some are really laid back, some are tougher, with a no-nonsense approach to things, and some have a bit of a combination of both styles. Most instructors are able to switch styles depending on the needs and personality of the students. Some students require a bit more laid back approach to things, while some others need a bit of tough love. Regardless of teaching style, we all, at some point have to get tough to get a point across. This does not mean that we are trying to be jerks, quite the opposite. We have to get tough because when you are on your own, planning and conducting your dives with your cave or tech diving buddies, the environment you will be diving in will be a lot less forgiving of mistakes.