About Dr. David
Dr. Dan David spends his days practicing optometry at the Family Eye Clinic in Pullman, WA, but his nights and weekends are a different story.
As Dr. David says, "I have hunted, fished, and backpacked a good chunk of the Palouse and the surrounding high country, rivers, and canyons." And he's been recording the colors and moods of the Palouse ever since he moved to the area in 1986, but he has also traveled to other parts of the Northwest and the United States. Further he has even hunted some far corners of the world - as much with a camera as anything else. This website is the result of the intersection of one of the most picturesque areas in the world and Dr. David's gift, and lifelong passion, for photography. Enjoy! |
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Continued from Dr. David's Blog:
My lineage can be traced back to the 1700s on the border of Kentucky and Ohio. It seems they were an agriculture clan. Men of the land - women too. Okay. They were farmers. It's a good life fostered by good people. Unfortunately it's more difficult to find from where the David name originated.
My paternal grandmother is a descendant of the Hathaway's. It seems that there may have been some royal blood in there somewhere which might explain some genetic vascular defects that are as prevalent as tick birds on black rhinos, and we all have about the same royal elegance as oxpeckers. Certainly it’s more likely, as Americans anyway, we were horse thieves – a profession certainly consistent with our temperament.
My lineage can be traced back to the 1700s on the border of Kentucky and Ohio. It seems they were an agriculture clan. Men of the land - women too. Okay. They were farmers. It's a good life fostered by good people. Unfortunately it's more difficult to find from where the David name originated.
My paternal grandmother is a descendant of the Hathaway's. It seems that there may have been some royal blood in there somewhere which might explain some genetic vascular defects that are as prevalent as tick birds on black rhinos, and we all have about the same royal elegance as oxpeckers. Certainly it’s more likely, as Americans anyway, we were horse thieves – a profession certainly consistent with our temperament.