In and around Otsego, many exposures don’t happen in a factory setting—they happen where life happens:
- Suburban yard and driveway treatment (homeowners using concentrated products, repeat seasonal spraying, or “quick kill” applications)
- Landscaping and maintenance work tied to spring and summer schedules
- Shared property exposure (applications near fences, shared mow lines, or common areas)
- Household contact (residue tracked on footwear or clothing after a treatment day)
- Outdoor work rhythms—when symptoms begin later, it becomes harder to reconstruct exactly what was used and when
Because of that, the biggest challenge is often not whether you feel sick—it’s building a clear, defensible connection between (1) exposure in your Otsego environment and (2) medical findings.


