HELP! Hungry, happy, haunted homemakers have heard!

Pick one for Sara's new dummy.


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But if it's mom calling he will probably answer because it could be an emergency, then he'll get in trouble for answering his phone during class.
The rule is the phone is to be powered off and kept in the backpack until lunch time.
It must be powered back off at the end of lunch.

He passed the test.
 
You can always thank them for the extra coop - you always wanted a free shed, right?
If it's on my land, it's only on it by a couple of feet. I'd far rather have good relations with the neighbours than quibble over a couple feet of land. I can see the conversation going something like, "I had a survey done, and your shed is a couple of feet on my land."
Neighbour says, "What are you doing to do about it?"
Me, "Nothing. Want some quail eggs?"

If they ever move or sell their land, I'd like the shed to go, but I'm not going to worry about it unless a survey shows that it's completely on my land or something like that.
 
If it's on my land, it's only on it by a couple of feet. I'd far rather have good relations with the neighbours than quibble over a couple feet of land. I can see the conversation going something like, "I had a survey done, and your shed is a couple of feet on my land."
Neighbour says, "What are you doing to do about it?"
Me, "Nothing. Want some quail eggs?"

If they ever move or sell their land, I'd like the shed to go, but I'm not going to worry about it unless a survey shows that it's completely on my land or something like that.
Might still want to get something in writing though, if it is on your land per the survey. That you are allowing it but the current land use doesn't create a permanent easement or transfer title of the land the shed is sitting on. And if they do move or sell, the shed needs to be moved off the property.
 
If it's on my land, it's only on it by a couple of feet. I'd far rather have good relations with the neighbours than quibble over a couple feet of land. I can see the conversation going something like, "I had a survey done, and your shed is a couple of feet on my land."
Neighbour says, "What are you doing to do about it?"
Me, "Nothing. Want some quail eggs?"

If they ever move or sell their land, I'd like the shed to go, but I'm not going to worry about it unless a survey shows that it's completely on my land or something like that.
My brother had a somewhat similar situation. His neighbor had a survey done to refinance his house. The survey showed that the fence line was on their property by ten ft. The fence was there enough years from the previous owners that he could have claimed adverse ownership. He helped them move the fence giving up all the trees that he had grown there along with his water well since it was also on their property.
 
Might still want to get something in writing though, if it is on your land per the survey. That you are allowing it but the current land use doesn't create a permanent easement or transfer title of the land the shed is sitting on. And if they do move or sell, the shed needs to be moved off the property.
Yeah. I want to have the survey done first, though. I don't want to even bring it up unless I'm certain that it's on my land. I haven't gotten the deed yet because the title company is tied up and they're still waiting for a signature or something from one of the sellers. There are 5 kids on it.
 
If it's on my land, it's only on it by a couple of feet. I'd far rather have good relations with the neighbours than quibble over a couple feet of land. I can see the conversation going something like, "I had a survey done, and your shed is a couple of feet on my land."
Neighbour says, "What are you doing to do about it?"
Me, "Nothing. Want some quail eggs?"

If they ever move or sell their land, I'd like the shed to go, but I'm not going to worry about it unless a survey shows that it's completely on my land or something like that.
Even if the shed is only a little bit on your property, it is probably there illegally since most smaller properties do have zoning requirements that prohibit anything being within x number of feet from the property boundary.
 
My brother had a somewhat similar situation. His neighbor had a survey done to refinance his house. The survey showed that the fence line was on their property by ten ft. The fence was there enough years from the previous owners that he could have claimed adverse ownership. He helped them move the fence giving up all the trees that he had grown there along with his water well since it was also on their property.
Sometimes things are worth fighting for, sometimes other things are more important. If things go as planned, they will be my neighbours for a very long time.
 
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