Import WordPress posts and migrate standalone content to Hugo

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- Copied standalone directories (curtain, farm, gobbler, house, images, party, revcemetery, railsday, birthday)
- Fixed all internal links to use /legacy prefix for archived content
- Remapped archive links to point to correct Hugo posts
- Fixed Louisville Georgia Cemetery post rendering issue

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Eric Wagoner
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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<!-- saved from url=(0046)http://www.ericwagoner.com/weblog/aboutme.html -->
<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>About Me</TITLE>
<META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
<META content="MSHTML 6.00.2600.0" name=GENERATOR></HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=#b6cdcc>
<DL>
<DT><B>E-mail:</B>
<DD><A href="mailto:eric@ericwagoner.com">eric@ericwagoner.com</A> Home
Address <BR><A
href="mailto:ewagoner@partnersoft.com">ewagoner@partnersoft.com</A> Work
Address
<DT><B>Phone:</B>
<DD>Office: (706) 354 1833 <BR>Home: (706) 245 9774
<DT><B>Postal:</B>
<DD>310 Woody Rd <BR>Royston, GA 30662
<DT><B>A map to the house:</B>
<DD><A href="http://www.mapquest.com/maps/map.adp?countryid=250&addtohistory=&country=US&address=310+Woody+Rd&city=Royston&state=GA&zipcode=30662&historyid=&submit=Get+Map">Here</A>
<DT><B>Photo:</B>
<DD><A href="http://www.ericwagoner.com/weblog/brakcostume.jpg*">Here.</A> <b>NOTE:</b> Due to *lots* of people hot linking this picture, this link is broken. Simply remove the asterisk (*) from the filename to see the picture.
<DT><B>Position:</B>
<DD>Officially, I'm the <B>Customer Support Lead</B> at <A
href="http://www.partnersoft.com/">Partner Software</A>, but we're such a
small company that we all share the duties, including programming and database
work. We make Engineering software for Electric Utilities and Map Browsing
software for general use.
<P></P>
<DD>
<DT>
<P>Did you find the right Eric Wagoner? This one went to High School in St.
Clair, Missouri, graduating in 1989. I spent the next eight years in <A
href="http://www.socorro.com/">Socorro, New Mexico</A>, attending school at <A
href="http://www.nmt.edu/">New Mexico Tech</A>, teaching Jr High, and being an
engineer at the local <A href="http://www.socorroelectric.com/">electric
cooperative</A>. I ran the New Mexico <A
href="http://devel.diplom.org/~dippouch/Email/">Diplomacy Adjudicator</A>, one
of several email-based diplomacy servers running around the world. (<A
href="http://devel.diplom.org/~dippouch/">Diplomacy</A> is one of the best
board games ever invented, marketed by <A
href="http://www.avalonhill.com/">Avalon Hill</A>). I've been in Athens,
Georgia for the last 2 1/2 years now. About half of the hits from <A
href="http://www.altavista.com/cgi-bin/query?pg=q&amp;sc=on&amp;q=%22eric+wagoner%22&amp;kl=XX&amp;stype=stext&amp;search.x=29&amp;search.y=7">web</A>
<A
href="http://www.google.com/search?q=%22eric+wagoner%22&amp;num=30&amp;sa=Google+Search">searches</A>
for "Eric Wagoner" do indeed refer to me, but there are quite a few for some
fellow with championship show cows. That's not me.
<P><A name=aboutlog></A><B>About the Weblog</B>
<P>
<P><I>Kestrel's Nest</I> is a weblog. Weblogs have been around since the dawn
of the web, but were only named recently. This one has been around since
October, 1999, a few weeks before the "Weblog Explosion". For more information
on weblogs in general, see Jorn Berger's <A
href="http://www.robotwisdom.com/weblogs/index.html">Weblog FAQ.</A>
<P>This weblog will contain tidbits of what I'm doing, thinking, and visiting
at any given time. In weblog fashion, the posts read down from most recent to
days past. Archives are kept and can be accessed in weekly chunks. The search
function will go through everything I've written, going back to the beginning
and including any ancillary pages I've written as well. The entries will vary
widely in subject matter, but primarily my interests are in science (focusing
in physics and astronomy), history, self-reliance, and computing. As the
customer-support lead for <A href="http://www.partnersoft.com/">Partner
Software</A>, software usability is a definite priority in my worklife. Even
with the easiest software (as ours strives to be), things can and will go
wrong. When it does, the problem needs to be diagnosed and fixed in the
easiest way for the user, and it's my job to see this done.
<P>Outside of work, I stay plenty busy by acting and directing <A
href="http://www.negia.net/~tandg/">theater</A>, studying history (and living
it in the <A href="http://www.sca.org/">Society for Creative Anachronism</A>)
and science, cooking, and playing the occasional game.
<P>
<P><B>Why Kestrel's Nest?</B>
<P>
<P>I first started using the nickname Kestrel in Junior High, after reading
Lloyd Alexander's <A
href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0440997313/qid=943409634/sr=1-40/102-8258312-0729654">Westmark
series</A>. The few times I got to play a character in <A
href="http://www.wizards.com/dnd/">Dungeons &amp; Dragons</A> (I was usually
the Dungeon Master), I played a character named Kestrel, who was not a typical
"super-hero" character. Instead of relying on strength or magic, he used his
wits to work though the situations his party's adventures got him in.
<P>Later, when I became active in the <A href="http://www.sca.org/">Society of
Creative Anachronism</A>, I kept the nickname Kestrel. Of course, Kestrel's
not a real medieval name (on paper I'm known as a Saxon named Drogo), but
that's what everyone knows me as. I've been able to explain the name thusly:
in Europe, the Eurasian Kestrel has long been known as one of the more
friendly birds of prey. It will happily nest in town (and some say even
prefers it) while nesting and travelling around the countryside. So, a person
in the country associated the Kestrel with visits from town, the spread of
news, and so forth. My SCA persona is a Saxon who travelled from monastery to
monastery spreading news and stories, and so got the nickname Kestrel.
<P>When I began doing this weblog (first via email to unwitting if not
receptive friends -- said one after a particularly fruitful day: <I>"So, I
take it that you are really enjoying your job..."</I>), I realized that this
was much the same thing, only a thousand years later. So, as this Kestrel
hunts through the countryside, he brings news and stories here for you to
share. Thanks for visiting, and make yourself at home.
<P><A href="http://www.ericwagoner.com/weblog">Back to the Nest</A><BR><A
href="http://www.ericwagoner.com/weblog/oldpage.html">The Old Page (A museum
piece from my college days)</A>
<P>
<ADDRESS>Eric Wagoner (eric@ericwagoner.com)</ADDRESS></DT></DL></BODY></HTML>