The house was nice and we had a pleasant. However, on the second day of our trip, the owner called and asked us to use as little water as possible, requesting us to take showers outside if possible, not using the dishwasher, and doing as little laundry as possible. If we failed to do these things we'd be asked to leave. One child in our party has autism and before this trip had never been able to take showers due to the sensory overload they cause. Luckily, with the help of his friends and a couple days of sponge baths, he was able to conquer his fear and use the shower outside. We had been asked to not use the garbage disposal a few days prior to our arrival, which was fine, but we were in no way forewarned about the actual complexity of sewage issues evolving with the house. Had we been notified, we could have brought more disposable supplies, extra towels and clothes, etc to be prepared. Instead, we only brought what we needed, given we paid for the amenities the house had to offer and did not expect to be asked not to use them. At this point, we had no choice but to comply, since our entire extended family had already used vacation time from work, spent time and money arranging obligations at home, made the travel down to the house, booked a golf cart for the week, and had booked a fishing trip. The stress of this added burden was completely inexcusable given the owner knew there was an existing problem and withheld the information from us until after our arrival and "settling in." We spoke with the neighbors who said the house was stinking so badly weeks prior to our arrival, that they called officials about the house's sewage/septic system. The neighbors were concerned for the health safety of those staying in this house. The bathrooms did omit a sewage smell intermittently. The owner had multiple people come out during our stay and work on the septic system. The house was beautiful, but we feel the owner needs to be more respectful of his tenants' time, money, and choice to rent a home for full price without the freedom to access the advertised amenities, especially if evacuation is being threatened and the health and well-being of tenants are involved.