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Your cart is empty.A premium mixture of annual Forage Brassicas, including both Forage Rape and Forage Turnip varieties. The forage varieties in ShotPlot are among the most palatable, nutritious and productive varieties available in the world, and were chosen for their ability to produce well, even in poor conditions. ShotPlot provides forage quickly by growing over 24 inches tall in 45 days. Once the Brassicas are mature, deer will begin devouring them as the plants surge with growth to replace leaves
ray doran
July 3, 2025
seems to be just what the deer would order they started on it a week after planting not giving it a chance to get a good startwill update after the summer in southeast Ont.
The man
May 23, 2025
Comes up quick and well. The deer are still on the remnants. I’m hoping it keeps them in food for the next few months.
Rob
May 7, 2025
A lot of people claim deer won't eat brassicas until after a frost, but i planted this in April 2014 and my deer are hammerin the forage rape in may and june!!!! It grew very well and i didn't even get my ph as high as i would have liked. I highly recommend this stuff for a low budget food plot. I mixed this with the throw and grow so it has some rye grass and clover mixed in but the deer are going right for the forage rape. i am going to replant part of my clover plot with this stuff in late summer.
grandpa
April 19, 2025
I have planted a lot of food plots over the years. Not many compare to the attraction power of Brassica (Tutnips, Mustard, Rape). I planted one bag (2.5 lb)over an old burnt pushpile that had decomposed. The bag of Shot Plot came up and looked like an emerald sea of green. At first, it got a few nibbles from passing deer, until the first frost. By then the plants were a foot or more tall, lush and green. The acorn crop, persimmons, grapes, and natural browse were getting scarce by then and the deer found the Brassica. There were several does, yearlings and bucks visiting daily and nightly. A trail camera caught the action. Eventually, it was eaten down and looked like it had been mowed. The plot was started in Late Sept of 2009 and grew until past March, when it went to seed and replanted itself. At last check (Nov.2011) there is still Brassica growing around that burn pile. It is not thick like in the beginning, but it still attracts the deer. I will have a bag or two of Shot Plot in every food plot I plant. It made a believer out of me and the guys in our hunt club. I would give six stars if there was six to give. We even pulled some and cooked them in camp....pretty darn good...no wonder the whitetails go crazy over Brassicas. I would mention that Brassicas are great when planted with other food plot varities that mature earlier, rye grass, clover, peas, etc.It is 2012 and I have another bag of Shot Plot (brassica). I will plant in late August to Mid September in middle Georgia. If you plant food plots, include a bag of Shot Plot in the mix or by itself as a late season food source for the wildlife. You will not be disappointed.
DSD
April 16, 2025
Got in the ground in NE VT in early August as the bag suggested. Showed good promise within a week, is now very lush and growing very well. Just waiting on a couple of good frosts to hit and archery season to open!
John
January 14, 2025
I planted after useing a 2 bottom plow than use a 3 point tiller than put the seed down and used a 900 pound roller and water it for two weeks and the third week it was up 4" turnips are hugh but animals only ate wheat and rye
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