Time Winds

Time winds were the winds of time within the Time Vortex and intercept points such as the Gateway. They could have a detrimental effect on computers such as K9 Mark II and occasionally beings such as the Time Lords.

Certain time sensitive species, such as the Tharils, could walk or ride the time winds to access other times and places. The Tharils used this ability to build an empire. Humans (being a non-time sensitive species) could not do this. (TV: Warriors' Gate)

Lady Peinforte made reference to riding the "winds of time" while travelling from 1638 to 1988 by means of a time storm. (TV: Silver Nemesis)

Items could be ripped apart by the time winds within the Time Vortex, or eaten slowly away. This also applied to species which lacked abilites to weather the time winds, including Daleks. (PROSE: Vortex of Fear, AUDIO: The Time of the Daleks, COMIC: Funhouse) Other forms of species could apparently live inside the Time Vortex without being destroyed by the time winds, such as the Reapers, whose resilience was so great the Ninth Doctor said nothing in the entire universe could harm them. (TV: Father's Day)

Iris Wildthyme's TARDIS would let in time winds every time it entered the Time Vortex. (PROSE: Verdigris) Iris Wildthyme worried about taking off with the doors to her TARDIS slightly ajar. (AUDIO: The Claws of Santa)

Captain Jack Harkness was killed by the time winds when he clung to the side of the Doctor's TARDIS as the Tenth Doctor attempted to dematerialise before Jack could reach him; however, Jack's immortality brought him back to life as soon as the TARDIS landed on Malcassairo. (TV: Utopia)

Placing something next to the heart of the TARDIS or the time rotor would expose it to time winds. Clara Oswald placed a turkey under the console, which the Eleventh Doctor explained would either be cooked or lay eggs. (TV: The Time of the Doctor)

Behind the scenes

 * A deleted scene from Daleks in Manhattan shows the Tenth Doctor saying "wherever the time winds take us". This implies the time winds working in a similar way to the wind on a sailing vessel.