Hansen said his father was a mentor to a lot of players and coaches.
"He was innovative in his rugby and introduced a defensive system that is still being used today, and a back attack alignment that is still being used today,'' he said.
And as well as being passionate about rugby, his father was a horse racing trainer, breeder, and owner, and "a crafty punter,'' he said.
Des Hansen, who died last week aged 78, was born in Balclutha and grew up in Clinton, before moving to Mosgiel and then Christchurch.
''... and on the way he touched a lot of people,'' Steve Hansen said. "There are not many great people in life and very few special, but, dad, you were one.
"He was happier talking about things he enjoyed than complaining about things he didn't have.''
He always had a message if people were prepared to listen, Hansen said. And he always challenged people to think.
He recalled when his father trained racehorses, he cut off his toe on the door of the float. The toe was stitched back on, and two weeks later his father cut a hole in his gumboot so he could stack hay for two days.
He showed similar toughness when he came home to find a party his daughter had organised had got out of hand with gatecrashers. "I got a stir-up for not kicking them out. I was only 12'' said Hansen.
His father ordered the gatecrashers out, and when one youth was silly enough to ask his father who the hell he was, his father fired a shot from his gun to hurry them along, and then directed a final blast at the car of the youth who had cheeked him.
His father also loved tug of war, and started coaching it. On one occasion his teeth fell out in the excitment of making a change - and then he stood on the dentures and smashed them.
Hansen also spoke of his father's story-telling ability and great one-liners. If he was not watching Trackside, he loved to watch westerns and read western novels, and also loved his garden.