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
At first light on a winter morning off the Oregon coast, the sky begins to luminesce the same creepy shade of doom you might expect at the Apocalypse. A gathering storm is chasing crab boats back to port, but the Chinook is running out to sea. Long as a locomotive and painted rubber-ducky yellow, it powers through the angry water with a thunderous boozh-boozh-babooozh! that sends explosions of spray hurtling past the pilothouse.
"She's built stout," yells Ken Olson, the boat's operator, and I want to believe. It feels as if we're riding a mechanical bull through a dunk tank, and I'm fighting the odd urge to yodel and retch simultaneously.
But this is just the morning commute for Capt. Dan Jordan, who routinely works in all manner of awful weather to guide ships into and out of the Columbia River. The bar, where the river's mighty current collides with ocean swells, is one of the most treacherous harbor entrances on the planet. Winter storms whip the sea into a ship-hungry maelstrom that long ago earned this patch of water the nickname "Graveyard of the Pacific." Pilots guide ships at every major harbor around the world, but the bar pilots here have distinguished themselves by working a potent brand of maritime mojo in the face of what a 19th-century naval officer called "the terrors of the bar."
Jordan has a rendezvous with the Rainbow Wing, a car carrier running in ahead of the storm with $72 million worth of vehicles fresh off the assembly line in Japan. And time is tight. "It's a pretty big storm out there," Jordan says. The forecast calls for 24-foot seas.
When the Rainbow Wing finally materializes out of the scud, a dozen miles out to sea, it looks like a ten-story-tall anvil plowing through the water. White-over-blue and as long as two football fields, it has "Honda" emblazoned big and red across its ample stern. Partway down the length of the ship, dangling like an afterthought, is a rope boarding ladder.
Olson cranks the Chinook around to maneuver alongside. Jordan turns up his radio, zips into his float coat—a self-inflating survival jacket—and heads out on deck. The Chinook rises and falls beneath the pilot ladder, and gobbets of spray fly through the air. Jordan bides his time until he can feel the rhythm of the swells. The boat's deck rises once more, and he launches himself for the fourth rung. He scrambles up the ladder as another welter of water blasts over the pilot boat.
Once aboard the Rainbow Wing, Jordan negotiates his way between the rows of gleaming CR-Vs on the cargo decks to the bridge. He confers with the captain and gets a quick feel for the way the ship moves through the water. "On a ship like this," Jordan says, "you need to think way far in advance of where you are. It's a big piece of steel we're driving here. If you're not on top of things, once you get in trouble, it's too late to get out."
He heads the Rainbow Wing toward the bar. Huge rollers roar ashore on both sides of the river entrance as he begins finessing the ship between the rock jetties and down the ship channel. When the Rainbow Wing finally arrives in Portland some 100 miles upriver, 80 longshoremen will drive the 3,508 vehicles off the ship.
The Rainbow Wing is the first of several ships that Jordan and his fellow pilots will try to sneak into port before the full fury of the storm arrives. It's highly technical, difficult, wet, dangerous work, little known outside the fraternity of harbor pilots. Yet these men—and one woman—are a crucial link in the global supply chains that make possible the 21st century's just-in-time economy.
Some 2,000 vessels and 700 souls have been lost on the Columbia River bar. Disaster has been written all over the chart ever since there was one. When the navy sloop Peacock arrived to map the area in 1841, it promptly wrecked on one of the sand spits bracketing the river's mouth—and the treacherous landmark was named Peacock Spit.
The bar pilots trace their heritage to 1813 and a one-eyed Chinook Indian chief named Concomly, who would paddle a canoe out to guide ships across the bar in exchange for axes, blankets and fishhooks. The Columbia River Bar Pilots organization was officially chartered in 1846 in Astoria, Oregon, 12 miles upriver, where today Victorian houses still crowd the steep hills to the waterfront and the pilots' office sits amid seafood restaurants and boat-repair yards. In the group's 163 years, some two dozen pilots have died on the job. The most recent was 50-year-old Kevin Murray. In January 2006, Murray took a cargo ship out in a storm, and as he climbed down the ladder toward the Chinook, a swell caught the pilot boat and Murray tumbled into the water, was swept away and drowned.
The bar pilots' work follows a seasonal rhythm. Beginning around October, the fierce North Pacific weather system, spanning thousands of miles, starts bowling ugly storms straight into the river's mouth like well-greased strikes. "It's brutal," says Neal Nyberg, captain of a government dredge that keeps the ship channel clear of sand. "I watch the bar pilots in the summer and it's like: Oh, what a joke. But it's in the winter when they pay the bills. Those poor bastards are out here getting the s--- kicked out of them."
These days, pilots still often haul themselves up and down gnarly wood-and-rope boarding ladders that look as if they were scrounged from the set of Pirates of the Caribbean. But they've also kept pace with the times. Their two so-called "fast boats"—the 73-foot, 2,600-horsepower, waterjet-propelled Chinook and Columbia—can survive a 360-degree roll. The Columbia River bar pilots are also one of the few pilot groups to use a helicopter, an Italian-made Agusta dubbed the Seahawk that can fly sideways at 45 knots, the better to maneuver onto ships when the wind is—in the pilots' idiom—blowin' like stink. Speed, after all, is everything. Every minute that a Chinese-made Tickle Me Elmo or a Japanese car languishes offshore, somebody's losing money. An estimated 40 million tons of cargo, worth $23 billion, crossed the Columbia River Bar in 2008. Taken together, Portland and several smaller ports upriver are first in the nation for wheat and barley exports, and third for automobile imports.
Each of the 16 bar pilots has the authority to close the bar when conditions are too dangerous. Still, Jordan says, "When we shut down the bar for two days, trains are backed up all the way into the Midwest. And just like a traffic jam on the freeway, once you clear the wreck, it takes a long time for it to smooth out again."
"There's a lot of pressure on us to keep working all the time," says Gary Lewin, a bar pilot for 26 years.
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Comments (27)
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
The article was informative for someone who has an interest in navigation of waterways. However, the pilot who brushed a bridge in California, hit the Golden Gate Bridge, not the Bay Bridge and I do not know a restaurant he could sit and discuss this in with the local informant with a view, which was of the Bay Bridge. Need a bit of editorial help. But great information on the scene in Portland. Thank you.
Posted by B Vineyard on February 13,2009 | 12:58 AM
My wife and I remember our visit to Astoria and driving over that breath-taking bridge, going into Washington. What the river pilots do is a wonderful service, and your article told their story well. Thank you.
Posted by Dan Myers on February 9,2009 | 02:33 PM
Fascinating, well-written story about these awe-inspiring men and woman, who brave such treacherous conditions to really make a difference in the world. Thank you, Matt Jenkins, and Ed Kashi -I look forward to seeing your photographs in the mag.
Posted by Linette Doheney on February 7,2009 | 08:21 PM
Wonderful article. It brought back many memories in the early sixties when I lived near Astoria and worked for WCA the airline serving the area back then. I got to know some of the bar pilots back then due to the fact that many times on outbound ships they could not make it back on the Peacock 2 after crossing out to the ocean from the bar. This then created a long ride on the outbound ship. Sometimes to San Francisco or much further. They would fly back to Astoria via Portland. I was the first to welcome them back at the Astoria airport. One such pilot I remember well was Kenneth McAlpine. I admired all of the pilots who lived lives of true adventure.
Ken Goudy Jr Oregon City, OR
Posted by Ken Goudy Jr on February 7,2009 | 05:46 PM
too bad they didn't cover in the article about where the river pilots and the bar pilolts will merge--or the 100 plus mile voyage of the river pilots.
Posted by glenn stotten on February 4,2009 | 12:41 AM
Thank you for this wonderful article. As a child we regularly visited my grandparents who lived high on a hill that overlooked the entire Columbia River bar. This was before the construction of the bridge and a huge treat for us was a ride across the bar area on the ferry to the Washington side and back. I have always marveled at the those who were able to navigate those treacherous waters. Thank you again for helping remind us all that we aren't really in charge of nature.
Posted by Patco13 on February 4,2009 | 10:03 PM
I read this article and enjoyed it immensely. It's a story little known or appreciated outside the maritime industry. I'm a graduate of the California Maritime Academy in Vallejo, CA (Class of 1963) and I sailed for many years in the merchant marine, and achieving my Captain's License along the way. I took ships in and out of the Columbia River many times during my sea-going years, and I always admired and respected the Columbia River Bar Pilots as being "the best in the business". Theirs is a job (and a responsibility) fraught with dangers at every turn -- and one requiring exceptional seamanship skills, outstanding ship-handling abilities, excellent health & fitness, and remarkable timing. I'm proud to say that several of my classmates from Cal Maritime Academy have risen in their profession to become Columbia River Bar Pilots -- and all have served the maritime industry well.... Captain Manny Aschemeyer Licensed Master Master (retired) Warner Springs, CA
Posted by Captain Manny Aschemeyer on February 4,2009 | 01:12 PM
My family have a histroy of river and seafareing going back to Queen Elizabeth the first, but the Thames was nothing like what I have just read. Well done to all who go down in boats and just keep bobbing along. I have seen many from my window but not read to much about the price they have to pay. It was a grand story and should be read by many who think its a piece of cake. The Brit on the hill. Brian.
Posted by brian sivers on February 3,2009 | 08:52 PM
I recently moved to Astoria, and I would see those little pilot boats going up to the big ships and running alongside them for a while and I wondered what was going on. Until I visited the Columbia River Maritime Museum. There I learned about the bar and river pilots and how they get onto and off of those ships. There's a display there:a big rope and board ladder going strait up one wall... whew! Even indoors with both the floor and the wall stationary and securely fixed together, it's no easy feat. Thanks for a great article.
Posted by Catherine Martin on January 31,2009 | 07:20 PM
I live here in Astoria just a stones throw from the Bar Pilots office. Before evoloving to the use of a Helicopter and Jet Boat, Bar Piolts in the last 30 years have actualled had to be rowed in a skif to the ship from a Pilot Boat Tender. Then a Pilot Boat Tender was built with a motorized boat that was stowed and launched from a groove in its stern.
I still have a drink or two almost daily with Don, who just turned 80, a retired Bar Piolt. He has some great stories about being rowed out to piolt a ship.
Captain Jerry Donnelly - Astoria, Oregon
Posted by Jerry Donnelly on January 31,2009 | 02:05 PM
very interesting article, enjoyed reading it. us landlubbers never hear of such things and the danger associated with them. Bravo and well done for all Pilots. bring more articles of the same caliber
Posted by A. M. Weidenbacher on January 28,2009 | 02:24 PM
Wow, perhaps this immediate snow storm we are experiencing here has colored my enthusiasm but this was one of the best written and thoroughly engaging articles I have ever read. Thank you Matt Jenkins for allowing us to experience the Bar Pilots through your eyes.
Posted by Randy Zuercher on January 28,2009 | 10:42 AM
When the helo doesn't fly in the winter, how do those 4 million dollar jet skis work? Didn't I read an article about a boat being built in Germany for the Columbia River bar pilots years ago and how they made a promise to the industry to keep the bar open for business?? has the group lived up to that promise?
Posted by Joe Pepper on January 27,2009 | 08:48 PM
What a splendidly written article. It really brought the work of the Portland pilots to life in the most graphic way. As a retired Liverpool pilot I have huge admiration for their work. Well done. Geoff Topp
Posted by Geoff Topp retired liverpool Pilot (UK) on January 25,2009 | 05:36 PM
I was glad to read this article, as the Bar and River Pilots do a great job in getting ships over the bar and up the Columbia River. Best Regards Paul R. Monk (Retired GM/Intl.Shipping/Ptld.,Ore.)
Posted by Paul R. Monk on January 24,2009 | 12:36 AM