In coastal cities like North Myrtle Beach, exposure stories commonly involve multiple settings:
- Vacation rentals and second homes where outdoor treatments are done between guest stays
- HOA-managed landscaping for neighborhoods near golf courses and common areas
- Frequent property turnover, where the person who used a weed killer may no longer live there
- Seasonal schedules (spring and fall maintenance cycles) that blur exact timing
When the timeline is fuzzy, it becomes harder for insurers—and harder for expert reviewers—to connect the dots between product exposure and medical findings. That’s why your early documentation matters so much here.


