I'm pretty sure one can get arrows for much less $$ than REMs so I don't see that as an issue!
Personally I think there is a place for all three types of markers (even though I was not taught the use of REMs! Gasp!). But (it should go without saying but...) everyone on the team has to be on the same page about the utilization of the markers from both a placement and removal/non-removal perspective, including times of stress eg lost buddy.
That's absolutely a mistake on the part of the other diver. Cave arrows in Mx point towards the closest exit. Navigational errors are not the cause of the arrow as long as the arrows agree. If you have conflicting arrows, that's a problem....but if all arrows in the area point in the same direction then there's no fault of whoever dropped the one arrow. If you take someone else's jump, follow someone else's arrow (that the jump is tied to) but ignore the permanently installed ones.....all while doing a dive in a part of the cave you're unfamiliar with and diving towards an unverified exit? I'm sorry, that's clearly the fault of the diver. Regardless, I'm thinking about changing my procedure over to all-cookies anyway...as mentioned above.
In my opinion conflicting arrows are not a problem. I've come upon many arrows that pointed in the (to me) wrong direction. Usually I try to figure out why they do that and usually (not always) there is some obvious reason for it.
Either way, I don't care where the arrow points, I just mark the T's.
I believe it is inherently dangerous to blindly trust any arrow that is installed. A diver should know at all times which direction is out and be 100% sure about it. If there is just the slightest bit of doubt at any point in time, it's time for a sharp exit.
so....what do these do that a cookie doesn't? besides reduce the weight of your wallet
When I am referring to a stressed team making a rapid exit, I am not always referring to the people who placed it,but another team that may encounter it in an emergency. This was tested by a cave instructor who put line arrows on a section of line, with a couple conflicting line arrows, and simulated a rapid emergency. The team missed the conflicting markers because their duration to study the marker was a nanosecond.
"Not all change is improvement...but all improvement is change" Donald Berwick
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