In a community like Healdsburg, exposure stories often follow familiar local patterns:
- Property and landscaping contact: Residents may mow, trim, or clean around areas that were recently treated for weeds.
- Secondhand exposure: Family members can bring residue home on work clothes or gear used for agricultural or grounds work.
- Worksite proximity: People employed in landscaping, vineyard support roles, or facility maintenance may encounter herbicide application zones.
- Seasonal timing: Many herbicide applications happen during predictable growing seasons, so remembering when symptoms started relative to those months can matter.
Because exposure routes can be indirect, it’s important that your lawyer understand your daily routines—where you were, what you were doing, and what products may have been present.


