Instead the fair, which was first held in 2009, offers an opportunity for people to develop or demonstrate their skills in card reading clairvoyance and other types of healing.
Organiser Barbara Dixon-Grant said there would be about 15 stalls set up at the St Kilda Scout Hall on Saturday for anyone wanting to give the spiritual activities a go.
The entry fee is a can of non-perishable food, which will be donated to a Dunedin food bank.
Mrs Dixon-Grant said anyone could be a clairvoyant, which meant being able to acquire knowledge through extrasensory perception.
"It just takes practice and maybe working with someone who's already doing it."

She loves colour and the "lady of the rainbow heart" Pip Oxlade introduced her to intuitive colour cards.
The philosophy behind the technique was the person having the reading done would find their own answers.
The person thinks about what they want to find out and draws three cards from the pack.
Mrs Dixon-Grant then would ask them a simple set of questions and point out specific details in their answers that pertained to the questions the person had answered.
"It’s mainly having the interest of facilitating other people’s answers that they need."













