By Terrie Todd
Before researching my novel set during
the Halifax Explosion, if you’d asked me what a “harbor pilot” does, I might
have taken a stab at it. Like an air traffic controller for boats? Maybe from a
helicopter?
Not quite.
Harbor piloting is a career that depends on where and how you were raised. Most pilots grew up on and around boats. They know their local harbor like they know their own mother’s face. They understand its tides, currents, and hazards. They know which ships are currently in the harbor, at which piers they’re docked, what they carry, and how fast they’re moving. They know the depth of the water and exactly what lies hidden beneath.
When a ship approaches the harbor, its captain requests one of these local pilots, who arrives alongside in a little pilot boat. He boards the ship by climbing the ladder tossed over the side for him. Once the pilot is safely aboard, the helmsman of the pilot boat tootles off to his next pick-up or drop-off. The pilot stands alongside the captain and guides the ship in, sometimes taking control if warranted. If the pilot does a good job, he’ll likely be called upon when it’s time to navigate out to sea again. With that complete, the pilot disembarks the same way he boarded.
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| Bedford Basin in Halifax's busy harbor during WWI |
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| Location of the 1917 Explosion |

Some of the explosion's aftermath.
The Reluctant Healer of Halifax is the final and sixth book
in Barbour Publishing’s Enduring Hope series by various authors. In
one-fifteenth of a second, the world’s prettiest harbor suffered the world’s
largest man-made explosion prior to Hiroshima. A story of love, loss, faith,
and honor set against Canada’s most devastating moment of the First World War.
Watch for it in August 2026.
Terrie Todd is the award-winning author of ten historical novels, all set in Canada where she lives with her husband Jon. A former church drama team leader and newspaper columnist, she’s also a frequent contributor to Guideposts Books, mother of three, and grandmother of five.
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