In and around Bonita Springs, herbicide exposure claims often start with a pattern—repeated contact over time—rather than a single event. Many people describe exposure through:
- Lawn and landscaping routines at homes, HOAs, and rental properties—especially during seasonal growth and weed control.
- Outdoor work such as landscaping, groundskeeping, pool deck maintenance, pest control support, or facility upkeep for offices and commercial plazas.
- Application residue on gloves, boots, clothing, tools, or lawn equipment that gets brought indoors.
- Secondhand exposure when a household member does the yard work and other family members share the same living spaces afterward.
- Near-by contact: mowing or walking treated areas soon after application, or being around spray drift when properties are maintained back-to-back.
Because Florida weather and outdoor schedules often compress “yard work season” into specific months, some exposure histories are more concentrated than people expect—making documentation especially important.


