- Successfully imported 1731 WordPress posts to Hugo markdown format - Migrated 204+ images from archive to static directory - 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 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
1.3 KiB
author, date, draft, title
author | date | draft | title |
---|---|---|---|
Eric Wagoner | 2000-06-13T02:16:21 | false | Wayne Newton's Vicious Dogs Kill |
Wayne Newton's Vicious Dogs Kill Elderly Census Worker! (You know, I bet I could write headlines for a living.) It's a terrible story, really. It reminds me of several houses I had to visit as an engineer for the electric cooperative in Socorro. There's a lot of crazy people living in the mountains that don't care much for other people. I only had a few guns pulled on me, a few dogs sicced on me (thank you, pepper spray!), and one cannon fired at me. That last one was pretty freaky. I hit a tripwire that was put across the driveway, at ankle height. When I pulled it, a trapdoor in the ground a few feet away flipped open, a small cannon (inch and a half barrel, roughly) popped up and fired. It only had powder in it, I think. A message to leave and soon. I was mighty glad that the howizer dug into the side of a hill beside the home didn't go off. I guess the tripwire controlling it was closer to the door. A hand-painted plywood sign did warn me that a Vietnam vet with special training in deadly traps lived there, and he'd use deadly force against all intruders. But who pays attention to signs anymore?