...when the school district requests that I submit Form ED-01650, "STUDENT REPORT FOR AIDS TO NONPUBLIC STUDENTS", so they can make budget estimates.
This form is actually only required in the fall, required by the Minnesota Department of Education to be submitted to the school district, and I put in some effort last year to confirm that it is only actually required for the nonpublic schools who are requesting certain services: partial reimbursements for textbooks and materials; health services; guidance/counseling.
The Department of Education and the school districts find Minnesota's homeschool laws somewhat confining, and as usual the bureaucracies demand as much information as they can get away with getting, the better to manage you with. Birth certificate applications practically want what the mother ate for breakfast now.
In other, more productive activities, I've put up a clothesline, after getting unstuck about where to put it. I got the idea of tying one end to one of the weed trees in the berry patch, but then I found a better spot.
The weather this month has gone from big snowstorm to 88 degrees back to cool spring weather, with occasional thunderstorms and two rounds of small hail. I have several warm-weather projects lined up, and have been chugging through indoor spring cleaning and organizing while waiting for the right conditions.
The children and I have been spring cleaning in the bedrooms. For me, I got my closet tidied up and brought out the back-up sewing machine, now that cabin fever season is ending and I don't have to be so protective of open floor space. I'm also in the middle of re-tidying my main fabric drawer. The older children very competently dealt with their rooms, and the middle children assisted me in getting their room done--in the process, we came up with some good ideas for making it work better.
I saved myself some time by deciding not to do a couple of projects. A reupholstered armchair was stored in the garage, and I thought I would have to de-upholster and de-critter it, but I looked it over and it is okay as is.
A green hardwood branch came down in the snowstorm, and I've been harvesting pieces of it for various purposes with my pocket knife, which has a saw: some straight sticks, some pegs, and maybe later some knobs.
We've made a couple of expeditions to the thrift store, and I spent some time reading labels on clothing. They had a lot more natural-fiber clothing than I expected, but you had to really seek for it.
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