Trophy Radish across regions.
Trophy Radish is reviewed in 2 of 15 agricultural regions for which we have independent variety performance data. Regions without an entry indicate insufficient data — not necessarily that the variety underperforms there. 2026 review cycle.
Performance by region
- New EnglandLimited Data
Forage radish establishes well in the Mid-Atlantic North late-summer planting window — Pennsylvania, New York, and northern New Jersey hunters use it in brassica blends behind small-grain stubble and corn.
- Mid-Atlantic SouthLimited Data
- Upper SoutheastLimited Data
- Deep SouthLimited Data
- Gulf Coast / FloridaLimited Data
- Corn Belt NorthLimited Data
- Corn Belt CoreGood
Trophy radish is the most widely-deployed forage radish in Corn Belt food plots — fast establishment, heavy summer foliage that deer browse aggressively, and tap roots that improve soil structure as they decompose after winter kill. Strong dual-purpose (food plot + cover crop) value.
- Corn Belt SouthLimited Data
- Southern PlainsLimited Data
- TexasLimited Data
- Northern RockiesLimited Data
- Southern RockiesLimited Data
- Pacific NorthwestLimited Data
- CaliforniaLimited Data
Regions marked “Limited Data” have not yet been reviewed for this variety. We don’t generate review pages where verified performance data is insufficient — a missing page is better than a fabricated summary.
Trophy Radish as a 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.
- Mid-Atlantic NorthCommunity Reports
- Corn Belt CoreCommunity Reports
- 13 additional regions pending review.