Buckwheat stands out as a high‑value warm‑season annual that can play a key role in summer deer food plots. While it’s not a full substitute for higher‑protein legumes, its combination of rapid growth, soil adaptability, and wildlife attraction—including deer and birds—makes it a smart choice to bridge the forage gap in late summer through early fall.


Why Plant Buckwheat for Deer?

Fast Establishment & Attractive Growth

  • Buckwheat food plot seed germinates in as few as 6 days, with flowering by 3 weeks after planting.
  • Matures fully in just 9–12 weeks, allowing even late-summer sowings adequate time to flourish before frost.

Moderate Browse Preference

  • Deer show a moderate preference—meaning they graze buckwheat steadily but don’t usually decimate it in small food plots.
  • This balance helps sustain cover growth even under moderate browse pressure.

Nutritional Value

  • Crude protein levels typically range from 15–25 %, depending on soil fertility.
  • Energy and nutrient density are lower than in soybeans or cowpeas—but good enough to attract deer when natural forage quality declines.

Habitat & Soil Benefits

  • Establishes quickly to smother weeds, shading out competition and helping with site cleanup.
  • Functions as an effective green manure: improves organic matter, phosphorus, and potash return when tilled under.

Wildlife Co-Benefits

  • Wild turkeys, doves, and pollinators (especially bees) feed on buckwheat’s flowers and seeds.
  • Adds value to broader wildlife management goals.

Planting & Management Guide

Timing & Seeding Rates

  • Buckwheat food plot seed is best planted from late spring through July or early August, depending on regional climate.
  • Ideal soil temperature: above 50°F, with most regions achieving that by mid‑May.
  • Seeding Rates:
    • Broadcast: ~50–60 lbs/acre (≈3 lbs per 1,000 ft²).
    • Drilled: ~35–40 lbs/acre.

Soil & Fertility

  • Does best in loamy, well‑drained soils, including acidic or sandy sites (pH ~5.5–6.0).
  • Nitrogen should be minimized—excess suppresses growth. Phosphorus and potassium can be applied (~200‑300 lbs/acre of 5‑10‑15 or similar) depending on soil tests.

Plot Integration & Blends

  • Excellent as a standalone quick gap crop or blended with soybeans, cowpeas, sunn hemp, sunflowers, or jointvetch to provide continuous summer forage and nutritional diversity.

Lifecycle & Termination

  • Buckwheat continues producing regrowth until flowering, even after partial browsing.
  • Once frost hits, plants mature rapidly and sugar content spikes—making them more attractive.
  • Can be tilled under after frost or removed to transition to cool‑season plantings (clover, brassicas, grains).

Benefits & Limitations Compared to Other Warm-Season Crops

AspectBuckwheatHigh-Protein Legumes & Cereals
Germination speed5–6 daysSlower (7–14 days)
Time to maturity~9–12 weeks12–16 weeks
Crude protein15–25 %20–30 %
Weed suppressionExcellent (rapid canopy)Variable
Soil adaptabilityExtremely tolerantNeeds fertility, drainage
Regrowth under browseModerate; tolerates moderate useSome recover, but more browse‑sensitive
Wildlife appeal (birds)High (seed & flower)Variable

Buckwheat shines when you need fast establishment and weed control in marginal soils. Blended plantings pair it with higher-protein species for overall performance.


Implementing a Buckwheat Plot Strategy

Choose Plot Area

Select sunny, well-drained areas with modest soil fertility. Ideal for remote or sandy sites that limit tillage.

Prepare Seedbed

Light burndown (e.g. glyphosate) followed by shallow disking or culti-packing. No deep tillage required.

Seed & Fertilize

Broadcast or drill seed at recommended rates. Apply 5‑10‑15 fertility if soil tests indicate low phosphorus/potash. Skip heavy nitrogen.

Monitor & Manage

Watch for grazing pressure. If deer nibble heavily, expect regrowth until flowering. Control weeds early; buckwheat suppresses many but not all.

Transition or Terminate

Terminate shortly before frost to plant cool-season forages. Alternatively, let frost kill plants then till in for soil improvement.


Case Studies & Expert Insight

  • Dan Schmidt (Deer & Deer Hunting) planted buckwheat on a central Wisconsin plot and observed deer feeding heavily within 3½ weeks. Even with nearly 40 % defoliation, the plot continued growth well into fall. He recorded protein levels of 15–25 % and noted buckwheat’s role in blends extending forage into early autumn.
  • University of Georgia Extension (2025) emphasizes buckwheat’s value as a warm‑season gap crop, available for deer browsing just 35–45 days after planting, and recommends combining it with grain sorghum for dietary diversity.

Pro Tips for Maximum Effectiveness

  • Planting windows: In northern climates, sow in late May/June. In the Southeast, planting into August is feasible with adequate moisture.
  • Avoid nitrogen-heavy amendments—buckwheat thrives in lean soils; nitrogen slows its growth.
  • Use blended plantings: pairing buckwheat with sunn hemp, cowpeas, sunflower, etc., extends attractiveness and nutritional coverage through summer into fall.
  • Rotate crops seasonally: Follow buckwheat with cool-season legumes or grasses for year-round forage. Its soil conditioning properties improve subsequent plantings.