---
title: "Cyclospora reports put fresh-produce safety on Spartanburg July 4 checklists"
url: https://www.herespartanburg.com/cyclospora-produce-safety-spartanburg-july-4/
date: 2026-07-04T06:01:32-04:00
modified: 2026-07-04T06:01:32-04:00
author: "Shaniqua Howard"
categories: ["Health Wellness"]
site: "HERESpartanburg"
attribution: "HERESpartanburg"
---

# Cyclospora reports put fresh-produce safety on Spartanburg July 4 checklists

*Source: [HERESpartanburg](https://www.herespartanburg.com/cyclospora-produce-safety-spartanburg-july-4/) — July 4, 2026 by Shaniqua Howard*

Spartanburg cookouts and lake-day picnics often hinge on a quick stop for bagged salad, fresh herbs, berries, and pre-cut produce. When public-health officials report an uptick in cyclospora infections around a holiday weekend, it’s a reminder to treat fresh produce like any other perishable: handle it carefully, keep it cold, and know what symptoms should trigger a call to your doctor.

Cyclospora is a microscopic parasite that can cause an intestinal illness called cyclosporiasis. People can get sick after eating food or drinking water contaminated with the parasite. It is not the same as typical “food poisoning” that resolves in a day — symptoms can linger or return without treatment.

What to watch for

• Watery diarrhea (often frequent)

• Loss of appetite, nausea, stomach cramps, or bloating

• Fatigue and low-grade fever

Symptoms commonly show up days after exposure rather than immediately after a meal. If you or a family member in the Upstate develops persistent diarrhea — especially after eating raw produce — contact a healthcare provider. Treatment is available and may be recommended if symptoms are significant or prolonged.

A practical July Fourth produce checklist for Spartanburg households

1) Keep cold foods cold: When you’re heading to Barnet Park, Croft State Park, Lake Bowen, or a backyard gathering, use a cooler with plenty of ice or frozen gel packs and keep it in the shade. Don’t let cut fruit, salads, or dips sit out for long periods.

2) Rinse, then dry: Rinse fresh fruits and vegetables under running water right before eating or cutting. Drying with a clean paper towel can help reduce surface contamination. (Soap or produce wash isn’t recommended for food.)

3) Separate prep areas: Use a dedicated cutting board for produce and a separate one for raw meat. Wash knives and boards with hot soapy water between tasks.

4) Toss “mystery leftovers”: If a picnic bowl of fruit salad has been out in the heat for a while and you can’t confidently say it stayed cold, throw it away.

5) Pay attention to recalls and advisories: If an advisory names a specific produce item, brand, or supplier, don’t try to “wash it off.” Follow the disposal or return instructions.

For restaurants, caterers, and anyone cooking for a crowd, the safest approach is also the simplest: buy produce from reputable suppliers, keep it refrigerated, and avoid cross-contamination during prep.

Why this matters during holiday weekends

Holidays can amplify food-safety risk in a few ways: more meals are prepared outdoors, more food travels in cars and coolers, and there’s often more reliance on ready-to-eat produce for quick sides. A spike in reported cyclospora cases doesn’t necessarily mean a single local source in Spartanburg, but it does mean extra diligence is worthwhile.

If you believe you became ill from a particular product, save any packaging you still have. That can help health officials trace a source if an investigation expands.
