THIS little chap on the left – held to be a young Jack Sparrow lookalike because of his pirate face markings – is taking his first tentative steps.

Farmer Palmer’s Farm Park staff, who were thrilled with their first “designer look” lamb, already refer to him as one of the pirates of Organford, although he has not yet been officially named.

That honour will go to whoever comes up with the best suggestion by the end of this month.

Amazingly, days after he was born, another ewe lambed to produce non-identical twins including another with the same black and white pattern.

A spokesman said: “Farmer Palmer’s has late spring lambing down to a fine art... quite literally.

“Instead of black or white lambs, they are producing some stunning mixtures.”

The mother of “Jack” is called Suzie – a three-year-old Shetland sheep who gave birth to his all-black twin sister moments before him at the Farmer Palmer’s attraction in Purbeck.

Farm director Sandra Palmer-Snellin said: “Our first designer-look lamb was actually the second born.

“The brother and sister pair are not identical. We felt this was a one-off, but to our surprise another ewe had non-identical twins but exactly the same pattern – first born black, second born black with patches on the face.”

Suzie had never given birth before, and if it wasn’t for the help of farm staff, the ending might not have been quite as happy.

Farmer Palmer’s spokesman explained: “It was obvious to the staff, Michelle Cox and Zena Loader, that this ewe was not going to cope alone.

“The girls from the Animal Barn immediately recognised that a nose and two little feet coming out all at once was going to be tricky,” the spokesman added.

To name the lambs, and to stand a chance of winning a free family Farmer Palmer’s day pass, email your naming suggestion to fun@farmerpalmers.co.uk