Bield:Farm
Crop directory

Brassicas across all 50 states.

Brassica rapa / Raphanus sativus / Brassica napusCover CropFrost Hardy6090 days to maturitySoil-temp ≥ 45°F

Brassicas (Brassica rapa / Raphanus sativus / Brassica napus) is a cover crop crop with a frost hardy frost profile. Across all 50 states, 46 have brassicas as a primary crop, 4 as secondary, 0 as limited, and 0 as trial-only.

Agronomy reference

Soil-temp minimum
45°F
Soil-temp optimum
55–80°F
Days to maturity
60–90
Water (in/wk)
0.5–1"
Soil pH
6–7.5
Nitrogen demand
moderate

Source: plants.usda.gov

Primary in 46 states

Commercially significant or common.

  • Alabama
    Zone 8a
    Fall · August 22September 6
  • Alaska
    Zone 4a
    Fall · June 22July 7
  • Arizona
    Zone 8b
    Fall · August 27September 11
  • Arkansas
    Zone 7b
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • Colorado
    Zone 5b
    Fall · July 22August 6
  • Connecticut
    Zone 6b
    Fall · August 1August 16
  • Delaware
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • Georgia
    Zone 8a
    Fall · August 22September 6
  • Idaho
    Zone 5b
    Fall · July 12July 27
  • Illinois
    Zone 6a
    Fall · August 1August 16
  • Indiana
    Zone 6a
    Fall · July 27August 11
  • Iowa
    Zone 5a
    Fall · July 22August 6
  • Kansas
    Zone 6a
    Fall · August 1August 16
  • Kentucky
    Zone 6b
    Fall · August 6August 21
  • Maine
    Zone 5a
    Fall · July 12July 27
  • Maryland
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • Massachusetts
    Zone 6a
    Fall · July 27August 11
  • Michigan
    Zone 5b
    Fall · July 22August 6
  • Minnesota
    Zone 4a
    Fall · July 12July 27
  • Mississippi
    Zone 8a
    Fall · August 22September 6
  • Missouri
    Zone 6b
    Fall · August 6August 21
  • Montana
    Zone 4b
    Fall · July 7July 22
  • Nebraska
    Zone 5a
    Fall · July 22August 6
  • Nevada
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 1August 16
  • New Hampshire
    Zone 5b
    Fall · July 18August 2
  • New Jersey
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • New Mexico
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 1August 16
  • New York
    Zone 5b
    Fall · July 27August 11
  • North Carolina
    Zone 7b
    Fall · August 16August 31
  • North Dakota
    Zone 4a
    Fall · July 7July 22
  • Ohio
    Zone 6a
    Fall · July 27August 11
  • Oklahoma
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • Oregon
    Zone 8a
    Fall · August 6August 21
  • Pennsylvania
    Zone 6b
    Fall · August 1August 16
  • Rhode Island
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • South Carolina
    Zone 8a
    Fall · August 22September 6
  • South Dakota
    Zone 4b
    Fall · July 12July 27
  • Tennessee
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • Texas
    Zone 8b
    Fall · September 1September 16
  • Utah
    Zone 6b
    Fall · July 27August 11
  • Vermont
    Zone 5a
    Fall · July 12July 27
  • Virginia
    Zone 7a
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • Washington
    Zone 8a
    Fall · August 11August 26
  • West Virginia
    Zone 6b
    Fall · August 1August 16
  • Wisconsin
    Zone 5a
    Fall · July 22August 6
  • Wyoming
    Zone 4b
    Fall · July 2July 17

Secondary in 4 states

Grown but not at scale; often gardens / food plots / cover.

  • California
    Zone 9a
    Fall · September 16October 1
  • Florida
    Zone 9b
    Fall · October 1October 16
  • Hawaii
    Zone 11a
    Fall · October 17November 1
  • Louisiana
    Zone 9a
    Fall · September 1September 16

Beyond the harvest

Hunting use · food plot

Brassicas as a hunting food plot.

Brassicas are the late-season deer food plot species. Tubers and tops sweeten after frost and become primary attraction during the rut and post-rut. Time planting 60-90 days before first hard frost.

Attractswhitetail deer

Brassicas planting in your county.

Bield: Farm ties weather and soil-temperature stations in your county to brassicas planting thresholds — get notified when conditions clear your target.