Hey guys....simply saying the following. Plant crops that have grown for centuries in your area and definitely plant them in a mix to avoid a crop failure. Naturalized is in fact a much better word. Thanks for that help! Monoculture is a bad idea, couldn't agree more. Tried and true methods usually don't involve a "buck on a bag mix", however. A lot of those mixes are put together to insure something grows and turns green. The Lick Creek mix is a good example. Nothing against them or anyone there, but i can't figure out why you would plant that mix together at the same time? In central WI for example, best planting window for clover is March/April in the snow or frost during the freeze thaw cycle. Best time to plant brassicas, Late July/early August. Best planting window for most cereal grains, either side of labor day. To Jack's point, there isn't a magic bullet and food plots only are a sliver of the whitetails diet. My argument is to use the right tool for the job at the right time of year and create your variety that way. Here, we plant clover as snow melts. Beans when the soil warms to 55-60. Take out a portion to all of the beans depending on grazing and pod development and plant a cereal grain blend. If we feel the urge, we sometimes plant a brassica of some sort (turnips, radishes etc) with the cereal grains but at a half or quarter rate. Again, just trying to get back to the biology of the deer providing spring protein and fall carbs. Provide those is a form that is "naturalized" to your area the deer will eat it. Also keeps your cost down significantly as opposed to the bags with a picture of Tiffany :) Have a great day all!