Steering Ships Through a Treacherous Waterway
Braving storms with 20-foot seas, an elite group of ship pilots steers through one of the world's most treacherous waterways—the mouth of the Columbia River
- By Matt Jenkins
- Photographs by Ed Kashi
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2009, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
"You're fighting nature at the same time you're using it to help you—but if you're not careful, it will take control," he said. "You develop an awful lot of respect for what the ocean can do to you. It does things you can't overpower."
All day long, the bar pilots have been helicoptering to and from ships as they work them in and out ahead of the storm. Once night falls, the weather rapidly deteriorates. Debbie Dempsey is on her way out aboard the Darya Raag, and at the Astoria airport the helicopter crew is readying to bring her in. Jeremy Youngquist, the helicopter pilot, buckles in and radios the Federal Aviation Administration for special clearance for a low-level flight below the descending clouds.
We lift off and wheel out into blackness. The Seahawk crosses the beach just 250 feet above the water, its five-million-candlepower searchlight stabbing through the rain and cloud.
Far out ahead, a vague presence beckons—the Darya Raag, safely across the bar with a load of petroleum coke bound for Australia, 23 days away. Within minutes, we're directly over the ship, and Wayne Simpson, the hoist operator, slides open the helicopter's rear door.
Below us, the ship is bucking through the water. Simpson sees that there is no way the helicopter can set down on deck. He prepares to pluck Dempsey off the ship with the hoist and bring her aboard the Seahawk. Up front, Youngquist and the co-pilot quickly run through a checklist to make sure the engines can spin out all the power they'll need to keep the helicopter safely suspended between the Darya Raag's heaving deck cranes.
Simpson's voice is a steady incantation over the intercom as he talks Youngquist in. With each roll the ship makes, the cranes swing uncomfortably close.
Dempsey, wearing a harness, stands ready at the port-side rail, and Simpson toggles the hoist control to send the hook down. The night is blacker than sin. Jet exhaust and rain are gusting through the cabin, and I half-expect the seven trumpets of Revelation to sound at any moment.
Then, in one quick motion, Dempsey clips into the hook and lifts off. A cascade washes over the deck beneath her. On her way up, she wraps one arm around the hook while she shields something beneath her other arm. As she scooches into the cabin and Simpson unclips her from the hook, Dempsey hands me the object under her arm—a box of green tea.
"Yeah," she says with a laugh, once she's plugged into the intercom. "The captain gave it to me on the way off the bridge."
Only then does Youngquist say that, from up front in the pilot's seat, he'd watched the wind and waves create a weird spinning genie hovering just off the ship's bow as Dempsey came up. As Youngquist wheels the helicopter around back toward shore, his voice comes crackling once more through the headsets: "It's gettin' funky out here."
The bar pilots take two more ships out that night. At around 5 in the morning, Capt. John Torjusen barely manages to get a bulk freighter called the Phoenix Island out, crawling across the bar as swells roll down the deck. Once the ship is safely in the open ocean, the helicopter crew hoists Torjusen aboard and flies him back to land.
For the next 19 hours, the bar is too dangerous to cross, and the order goes out to close it. Inbound ships gather off the coast, outbound ships remain in port, dockworkers and freight trains pause their frenzied handling of goods and the pilots leave the bar to itself.
Matt Jenkins is a contributing editor of Paonia, Colorado-based High Country News.
Ed Kashi's latest book of photographs is Curse of the Black Gold: 50 Years of Oil in the Niger Delta.
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Comments (27)
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I had the priveledge of working in that specific environment for 11 years, and I can only say that the whole crew there (Marine Pilots, Pilot Boat Operators/Deckhands and Helicopter crews) are an absolute professional outfit that can accomplish some incredible feats of ability while maintaining an extremely safe culture of operations. Cheers!!
Posted by Wayneiac on April 17,2012 | 09:03 AM
You are most definitely a privileged individual.
Posted by Dexter Eby on November 24,2010 | 01:18 PM
I am so privileged to work for the Columbia River Bar Pilots. I am in awe daily of the job they do. I have the good fortune to have seen it first hand (and gotten extremely sea sick). They are all phenominal.
Great article. You gotta love Captain Dan.
Posted by Felecia eby on August 6,2010 | 12:52 PM
I am hoping to hear from Marilyn Derichs Moran - who commented above about George Erbe - I am the granddaughter of George (daughter of Frances Jean Erbe Schmitz) and I would love to hear from you. He used to make those pancakes for me too (and my brothers and sister). I would love to hear more of what you know about him!!
Posted by Candace Schmitz Lugviel on June 26,2010 | 11:29 PM
Yowza!
Posted by Laura Lynne on September 12,2009 | 02:13 PM
Captain George Erbe, who was one of the Astoria bar pilots (1940-1960 approximately) loved his work. We, as kids, when visiting, were privileged to hear about his work when he returned from a piloting job, often early in the morning. He would tell his stories while making "Uncle George's Hotcakes" for us. Prior to joining the Astoria Bar Pilots Association, he had been a bar pilot on the Yangtze. The Japanese invasion of China and WW II forced him to send his family back to the States and he later followed. This article and the pictures are a treasure I share with my own children and grandchildren, while making more "Uncle George's".
Posted by Marilyn Derichs Moran on June 7,2009 | 12:55 PM
Great article. Having fished for years out of Ilwaco and having crossed the bar in a small boat on the best of days, I can attest to the job the pilots perform. It is a great side show to the fishing to watch the pilot boat or helo making thee trip out with the pilots. It is also fun to listen to the communications between the pilots and the ships. As a result, my son is currently attending Cal Maritime Academy, as many of the Columbia River Bar Pilots have done,in hopes of one day becoming a Columbia River pilot. As for Travis who wants more info, check out California Maritime Academy at www.csum.edu.
Posted by Tuck on April 1,2009 | 01:55 AM
this is a great article, im am very interested in becoming a harbor pilot. I live in northeast florida im about to graduate high school is their any info anybody can share with me to help get me started. THANKS
Posted by travis on March 30,2009 | 12:07 AM
Outstanding article!! I'm an ex U.S. Navy Harbor and Docking Pilot and now a Civil Service Ship Pilot working for the Subase in Groton, Connecticut. Always fascinating to hear of Pilot exploits from other ports around the world. I've climbed those ladders, rode the helos and know the perils well. Kudos to the Columbia Bar Pilots and all those that that help "keep 'em 'tween the ditches".
Posted by Capt Rich Willette on March 22,2009 | 09:00 PM
Good article about good job! I became more proud of our profession. Best wishes to all pilots.
Posted by sergey shabal,sankt-petersburg pilot, russia on March 19,2009 | 03:25 PM
I am a Seattle naval architect. I was raised in Astoria and have known many bar pilots and boat operators over the years. I have crossed the bar with them a number of times, in good weather and bad. Your article is excellent. You have provided an excellent description of their operation and added to my knowledge, but more impressively you have captured the spirit and feeling of this little known but essential piece of world commerce. Thank You.
In response to Joe Pepper:in the early 1960’s the bar pilots moved from the hand rowed skiff, lowered from a former minesweeper, to the Peacock. This boat was based on a German North Sea rescue boat. The Peacock featured a stern ramp from which a powered skiff was launched and retrieved. She was exceptionally seaworthy and served the pilots well for about 40 years until she was replaced by the Chinook.
Posted by Tom Dyer on March 1,2009 | 01:56 PM
A fascinating article about this dangerous profession. What these Columbia River Bar Pilots accomplish is indeed, seamanship at its finest. A few years ago I visited Astoria, Oregon for the first time and was exposed to this beautiful city and learned of the Columbia Bar, the Bar pilots and their history. I can't wait to go back. Your wonderful informative article about this usual occupation further whetted my appetite to return to this city and learn more.
Posted by David Dvorak on February 26,2009 | 11:17 AM
Sorry to differ with B Vineyard's post about the ship that hit a Bay Area bridge, an accident mentioned in our article, but we did in fact get it right. It was the Bay Bridge, not the Golden Gate, as this recent news article about the accident points out: www.mercurynews.com/topstories/ci_11734488?nclick_check=1 Thanks for your interest.
Posted by Terence Monmaney, Executive Editor, Smithsonian on February 19,2009 | 04:50 PM
Facinating artical, the public often see large ships navigating up and down many rivers and harbors I don't think many of them even know that a local pilot is on the bridge. wether at the bar or local harbor, Pilots are the unsung heros protecting the locals from harm. Michael J. Scanlon, CWO4 USCG (ret) Chariman, Rhode Island State Pilotage Commission
Posted by Michael Scanlon on February 16,2009 | 08:58 AM
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