Friday marks the spookiest day in the calendar with trick-or-treaters gearing up for a night filled with sugar, scheming and fancy dress.
And it seems spring lambs in Swansea are also embracing the Halloween spirit.
Youngsters can visit the sweet lambs, alongside baby bunnies and piglets, on Will’s Petting Farm in the Gower.
Pictures show the adorable animals nestled between multi-coloured pumpkins.
The sweet woolly babies are waiting to meet those ditching going door-to-door in favour of more wholesome activities.
As well as feeding the animals, guests on the farm run by 18-year-old Will can also visit its pumpkin patch.
This Autumn farms have been reborn as gourd wonderlands with fields transformed into cinematic sweeps of orange, yellow and green.
But not all patches are created equal.
Pictures show the adorable animals nestled between multi-coloured pumpkins
The lambs are waiting to meet those ditching going door-to-door in favour of more wholesome activities
This autumn follows the hottest summer since records began, and four successive heatwaves caused Britain’s pumpkin crop to fruit weeks ahead of schedule.
Many frustrated farmers elected to leave their pumpkins in the field. But heavy rain since August has caused the pumpkins to rot – turning the yield into something approaching a field of screams.
Apt for Halloween, but very bad for business.
But Tucked away in the countryside, one pumpkin patch boasts a huge 50 varieties and is half the price of viral Tulleys.
Cammas Hall Farm, in Essex, has opened its doors to visitors wanting to pick their own since 1966.
There are plenty of spooky tunnels on site to explore and Halloween characters to interact with.
What’s more, the patch is home to the world’s only giant erupting ‘Pumpcano’ which is a giant stack of pumpkins with flames firing out of the top.
Alex Murphy Klein, who has appeared on Dancing On Ice twice, visited the farm and described it as ‘the best place to pick pumpkins in all the UK’.











