She's happily posing for her first baby pictures. "Spotty" or "the mottled one" was born on the fields at St Columba's Catholic College this month, one of the six new additions to the black-faced Suffolk sheep family that arrived unexpectedly on the anniversary of the 2013 bushfires.
Some of the Year 10 agriculture students held the lambs for a short photo shoot with the Gazette recently, while their mothers barely tolerated the experience, baaing noisily in the background.
Shane Watson, who heads up the agriculture department at the school, said they were "caught unawares" but appreciated the good news on a particularly sad day.
"It was a bit of a surprise, traditionally we get them here in late July or August but to come on the anniversary of the fires ... it was a real positive thing for us," Mr Watson said.
Tim Pout, 16, said he enjoyed working with the animals and "seeing them grow up".
"They're very cute," added his classmate Millie Hyssett, also 16. "It's good to have them here so we can see what the mothers do."
Mr Watson said the lambs would probably get very confused as "different classes will give them different names". The school would keep the four ewes but the two rams would have another life on a farm in Nowra where they would be popular "lawnmowers" after Christmas.
The school suffered through a second fire recently - a suspected arson attack during the school holidays which caused about $10 million in damage to the school's technical hub. The school will spend another fortnight demolishing those classrooms.
Andrew Heath, co-ordinator of Tech and Applied Studies, whose classes are now working on a new greenhouse outside, said the "lamb bonanza" had been a piece of good news in a difficult month.