Martin Smith's been coming to the Coromandel since he was 14 years old.
"My heart was always here in Kuaotunu so I finally moved here, now I have to battle for it to remain as I have always liked it," the Kuaotunu Anti Mining Action Group member says.
His battle is against the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment (MBIE), and Waihi Gold Company a.k.a Oceana Gold - two of five groups appealing the Thames Coromandel District Council's (TCDC) proposed District Plan in the Environment Court.
"What's happening at the moment is that the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment, which is basically the government, has teamed up with Oceana Gold and they are currently in the process of taking our District Council, the TCDC to court with the idea of loosening the mining restrictions on the peninsula," Kuaotunu Anti Mining Action Group Member, Brian Walsh says.
Three other groups - Coromandel Watchdog, Forest and Bird and NZ Blackjack Farms - are appealing the plan on the basis that it doesn't promote the sustainable management of the natural and physical resources in the Coromandel District, which is inconsistent with parts of the Resource Management Act.