In and around Clayton, many glyphosate-related claims follow a familiar pattern:
- Residential and property maintenance exposure (garden beds, driveways, fence lines, and “spot treating” weeds)
- Secondary exposure (family members or neighbors affected by treated areas or take-home residue)
- Seasonal record gaps (receipts thrown out after the season, product labels damaged by weather, or photos never taken)
- Timeline confusion (symptoms appearing months or years later, long after the bottle is gone)
You don’t need perfect records to start—but you do need a strategy for building a credible exposure story from what’s still available.


