David Cameron cuddled up to a newborn lamb after warning British agriculture would be hit if the UK votes to leave the European Union.
The Prime Minister was handed a two-day-old lamb by a little girl during a tour of a North Wales farm after claiming farmers could lose as much as £330m on lamb and beef exports if voters backed Brexit.
He warned British farmers could "suffer enormously" if the UK opts to leave in the 23 June referendum.
Brothers Richard and David Williams - who own Tyfos farm in Llandrillo, near Corwen, Denbighsire - showed the PM around as he put agriculture at the heart of his latest appeal for voters to keep Britain in the EU.
Mr Cameron said: "Farmers are faced with bureaucracy, inspections, the payment system and it's very important we deal with those issues but there's a bigger issue which is a market of 500 million people who we can sell some of the best meat in the world to."
He spoke of the consequences of leaving Europe: "You'd have to meet all their rules and you wouldn't have any say on what they are and that doesn't make you any more sovereign or more powerful."
When asked if there was a Plan B in the event of Brexit, the PM said: "Of course we have to be ready, we have just produced a document on the alternatives."
Mr Cameron added that more than 90% of UK lamb and beef exports, worth around £605m, currently go to the EU.
The farming sector contributes £9.9bn to the UK economy and employs nearly half a million people.
If farmers had to rely on World Trade Organisation rules rather than EU membership to secure access to the European market, Mr Cameron claimed they could be faced with tariffs costing £240m a year for beef and £90m for lamb.
Earlier, Boris Johnson called on voters to ignore the "pessimists and merchants of gloom" and back a UK exit from the EU.
He claimed the EU was an "anachronism" that "wastes our money massively" and "subverts democracy in this country".
But in his speech in Wales, Mr Cameron accused Brexit campaigners of promoting a vision of life outside the EU that was "too good to be true", and warned a vote for leave would put jobs and trade in danger.
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