Council and police officers today closed down a planned cannabis festival near Outram, but organisers have vowed the show will go on at a different site.
Dunedin City Council community services general manager Simon Pickford turned up with police about 1.30pm and issued trespass notices to organisers and some of the few attendees who had turned up early to the festival at Woodside Glen.
The Harvest Festival was set to start on Saturday on council reserve land, to coincide with 4/20 (April 20), a worldwide day of cannabis celebration.
But it ran into trouble before it began, when council chief executive Sue Bidrose sent a letter to organiser Joe Nicolson, asking him not to proceed with the event.
Dr Bidrose said the council was not prepared to allow him to use council-owned land to host the event without a permit.
Mr Nicolson said the cannabis and hemp festival was a more professional alternative to the J Day cannabis smoking protest in the Octagon in previous years.
It is billed online as a celebration of all things cannabis, headlined by Tiki Taane, and featuring hemp and cannabis businesses, music, food, workshops and panel discussions.
Asked if he should have organised the festival better, considering he was charging for entry to a public space, Mr Nicolson said he had organised another venue well in advance, but that had fallen through.
He repeatedly claimed that police had told him to use Woodside Glen, which police had earlier denied.
The Christchurch terror attacks had also got in the way of planning.
Mr Nicolson declined to say where the event would be held tomorrow, but said he expected "thousands'' to turn up.
"We've got a strong community New Zealand-wide, and when they see this it's just going to rark them up.''
People would be able to camp overnight at the new venue.