TITTABAWASSEE TWP, MI — A Michigan apple orchard with three pregnant goats due to give birth this month celebrated the mommies-to-be with a maternity photo shoot, no kidding.

Sara Reisinger and Jamie Jones, sisters and managers at Leaman’s Green Applebarn, took the photos of the goats dressed up in flower crowns and tulle bows in a grassy field Tuesday, June 4. They then shared the quirky photos on the Leaman’s Facebook page, inviting the public to guess when the kids will arrive for the chance to win a prize. The Facebook post garnered more than 500 comments in the first 18 hours.

Leaman’s, located at 7475 N. River Road in Freeland, is a popular fall destination known for all things apple, goat yoga and other fun events. It’s a seventh-generation family business and Reisinger and Jones are the sixth generation.

“Both of us were involved in 4-H as kids, so we have been breeding goats all of our lives," Reisinger said. “We started up goat yoga at Leaman’s Green Applebarn last year and it was a huge hit and the love of goats came back to us and we started breeding again."

Reisinger said the three pregnant goats, Patty, Rexy and Twizzle, will likely give birth to a total of three to six babies. Those new goats will be used for goat yoga and be available for families to visit at the farm.

"Goats just have a fun energy to them, which is why we love them so much,” she said.

The farm’s next goat yoga sessions are scheduled to take place on June 26, 27 and 28.

Leaman’s goats are no strangers to social media. Photos and videos of them can be found on the company’s Facebook page and Instagram. Before the season eight premiere of HBO hit Game of Thrones in April, the sisters posted photos of them dressed as fictional characters Daenerys Targaryen and Jon Snow.

Reisinger said the photos and social media posts are fun to make and share, but they also serve a greater purpose.

“It’s our mission to connect people with agriculture. So many people are so far away from the farm life that we try to do fun things…to get people connected with agriculture," she said.