In and around Seymour, many exposure details are tied to seasons—spring and summer maintenance, roadside vegetation control, and recurring landscaping habits. Because of that, families often discover that the timeline becomes blurry as months pass.
Start by building a “two-track” record:
- Your health timeline (symptoms → diagnosis → treatment changes)
- Your exposure timeline (where weed killer was used or applied → who applied it → approximate dates)
Even if you don’t know the exact product name yet, you can still preserve useful clues right now, such as:
- photos of product containers (front/back labels)
- receipts or account records from purchases
- notes about who handled lawn/yard work (including contractors)
- photographs of application areas (driveways, fence lines, landscaping beds, walkways)
- any communications you have from property managers or maintenance staff


