The gripping biography of one of New Zealand's most distinguished farmers, entrepreneurs and aviation heroes.
The gripping biography of one of New Zealand's most distinguished farmers, entreprenuers and aviation heroes.
When Sir Tim Wallis’s Spitfire crashed at Wanaka airfield in 1996, his accident was reported around the world. This lion-hearted Central Otago man, a legendary figure in the aviation, deer farming and business worlds, was suddenly fighting for his life.
Sir Tim Wallis is known as the helicopter pilot and entrepreneur who pioneered New Zealand’s deer industry. A multi-millionaire, he is also the man behind the successful Warbirds Over Wanaka air pageant. For decades he’s had a passion for collecting, restoring and flying vintage fighter planes.
Tim’s adventurous life story is told here by writer Neville Peat, who shares his great love of the South: Fiordland, South Westland, Central Otago and the Southern Alps. Hurricane Tim is an absorbing account of the adventures of Tim Wallis that equally extends to faraway places where he applied his business instincts – southern Siberia, tropical Vanuatu and Canada.
After Sir Tim’s 1996 crash, he was given just a slim chance of survival. But survive he did. With astounding determination he has learned to speak and walk again, albeit slowly. Undoubtedly Tim inspires all who meet him; his story is equally inspiring. What drove this extraordinary character to live at the edge throughout his life? Author Neville Peat draws us into the hurricane that is Sir Tim Wallis.
Neville Peat (1947-2026) was an award-winning author and photographer of more than 50 books, covering themes of geography, biography, natural history and the environment. Fascinated by wild and remote environments, dynamic landscapes and unique fauna and flora, he explored much of New Zealand and the South Pacific, from the far-flung tropical atolls of Tokelau, to the snow and ice of the Ross Dependency, Antarctica.
In the late 1970s, Peat spent two summers at Scott Base as a journalist and photographer, and subsequently wrote several books on Antarctic themes.
Wild Dunedin: Enjoying the natural history of New Zealand’s wildlife capital (with Brian Patrick) won the 1996 Natural Heritage category of the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, and their Wild Fiordland was shortlisted in 1997. Other books include: Snow Dogs: The huskies of Antarctica; Detours; The Incredible Kiwi; Land Aspiring: The story of Mount Aspiring National Park; Coasting: The sea lion and the lark; Subantarctic New Zealand: A rare heritage; Antarctic Partners: 50 years of New Zealand and United States Cooperation in Antarctica, 1957–2007; High Country Lark; Seabird Genius: The Story of L. E. Richdale, the royal albatross and the yellow-eyed penguin; The Falcon and the Lark: A New Zealand High Country Journal and Shackleton’s Whisky. Peat’s biographies include the bestselling Hurricane Tim: The Story of Sir Tim Wallis.
A fifth-generation descendant of Scottish pioneers in Otago, Peat lived with his family at Broad Bay, Otago Peninsula, near populations of royal albatross, yellow-eyed penguin, New Zealand (Hooker’s) sea lion and New Zealand fur seal, which featured many times in his published works.
He served as a councillor and as deputy chair on the Otago Regional Council, and for a period chaired its Environment and Science Committee. He also undertook commissioned work for Otago Museum, and his comprehensive report on the Subantarctic islands earned World Heritage Area status for five groups of the islands.
In 1994 he was named Dunedin Citizen of the Year, in acknowledgement of his books on the region and his work in establishing the Dunedin Environmental Business Network. In 2007 he was awarded the Creative New Zealand Michael King Writers’ Fellowship to write The Tasman: Biography of an ocean.
In an interview with the Otago Daily Times in 2008, Peat spoke of the importance of books that ‘weave nature into the world of human endeavour and emotion…only through a better understanding of nature can humans, as a species, expect to survive for long.’
In 2018 he was awarded the New Zealand Order of Merit and in 2024 he was awarded the Prime Minister’s Award for Non-fiction, acknowledging his work's significant contribution to our collective understanding of Aotearoa New Zealand’s unique natural environment and its conservation. In his acceptance speech, Peat reflected on his overarching aims: ‘I have tried to convey something of the essence of New Zealand – its nature, its geography, its ability to astound and inspire.'
He died in Dunedin in March 2026, aged 79.