"I'm partially agreeing and partially saying we don't need that much stuff to begin teaching students. The greenhouses aren't in the greatest shape, but I'd bet that Snape could find enough there to make for basic instruction and we start them on herbology early, letting them work in the greenhouses to grow their own potions ingredients. I know Hogwarts was a boarding school and it can be again, but we could figure out a way to only have the students here during the day, then we wouldn't need to worry about clothes or more than one meal. The greenhouses can also be used for growing food and there are likely still some non-magical animals in the Forest that can be hunted for food, or we can go to areas where there are. There are edible plants in the various wild places in the country, fishing. While it might offend the sensibilities of some, it is actually possible to survive with only one or two sets of clothes. There are always odd jobs that can be obtained in the muggle world. Food and clothes are food and clothes. Survival doesn't require robes or Honeyduke's. If worst comes to worse, we send the house elves out to get what we need -- only what we need -- from muggle areas." He shrugged. "It's not easy, but it's doable if we want to have more time to make ourselves secure here."
Remus snorted. "One successful case does not a rule make. There's no other documented case of a werewolf having a normal child and it's considered a fifty-fifty chance by some, that the child be born with the curse. If there is one thing I won't do, it's willingly put a child at risk of suffering through this. You can tell me off all you like, but on this, I won't change my mind and if my future self let you change his, then he was a fool." He would ignore Dumbledore's opinions, considering he sent Remus empty-handed to persuade the others not to join Greyback who promised them everything they wanted to hear, whether they had a pray of getting it or not.
"Her husband and brother-in-law weren't Blacks," Remus pointed out with a chuckle. "But, there was nothing funny about how Greyback dealt with children. Those the were ones I dealt with most, the older werewolves not trusting the 'young pup'. The things he did in the name of pack loyalty were no laughing matter. Had they been normal magical or muggle children, someone would have stepped in and removed them from his custody. But, society hates and fears our kind so much, they turned their back on the abuse and suffering. If they died, well, they were better off that way. With no one else to take them in, Greyback could do anything and they had to take it, or take their chances alone on the streets."