About 20 people have marched around Paihia carrying placards, chanting and meowing to protest Far North District Council plans to catch and re-home a colony of cats.
While Saturday afternoon's protest was not the "Paihia Pussy Riot" promised by the Paul Henry Show and fell well short of the 300 people organisers hoped for, Paihia Cat Protection (PCP) spokesman Klaus Kurz said it was only the start of the group's campaign.
For the past 11 years volunteers led by 88-year-old Betty Chapman have fed a colony of cats abandoned at Paihia's Village Green. The volunteers also ensure any newly dumped cats are neutered so they cannot breed.
Recently, however, conservation groups have called for the cats' removal, saying they pose a threat to rare shorebirds such as the dotterel as well as native birds in the nearby Opua Forest, where Bay Bush Action (BBA) is working to eliminate pests and restore native wildlife.
The issue has polarised Paihia residents and caught the council in the middle. After the original cat feeding station was removed, the council allowed PCP to build a temporary feeding station beside School Rd. That was removed last month and a council committee voted last week to catch the remaining cats and re-home them. The Bay of Islands SPCA has agreed to find suitable homes.