@Smawgunner2
I am happy to provide any opinions/suggestions from my own experiences, at any time. I will say with 100% certaintiy, between my farm and the neighbors being cut in the past 10 years, the hunting has become better, each year.
Here is my quick take
1. Can deer live in closed-canopy forest? Sure! Deer thrive in secondary successional habitats.
2. Deer are concentrate selectors - meaning they eat the highest and best quality food available, even down to the specific leaf on a bean plant. This means they also will find the pockets of the best quality food/habitat and spend a large distribution of their time in said pockets based on this fact. Note - a deer's range is conservatively 640 acres (sq. mile).
3. Invasive treatment - this is very important. Yes, deer will eat MFR and AO but it is not nearly as nutritious as our native plants - not to mention, it will choke out our native plants.
Soo, what are good next steps for turning a 20,30, or 40+ into a solid piece of whitetail hunting paradise?
1. Set realistic goals, unfortunately, the neighbors will have some impact on your hunting. However, not all is ever lost, huge bucks get killed on highly pressured public ground every year. The likelihood of your property and surrounding having the same hunter density, isn't very likely.
2. Contact a forester. I would start with your state forester. It is free!! They will come to your property, walk it with you, evaluate what needs doing, give you a timber mgt. plan.
3. Consider a consultant forester - these folks are worth a lot, as long as they are trustworthy - they will manage the mgt. plan, manage the quote process, the logging process, etc. VERY HELPFUL!
4. Contact your NRCS office with your state forestry plan and see what monies you can be awarded for completing the work! How great is this, better deer habitat, and you get paid?! Fantastic!!
After meeting with these folks you can find areas that need "reset" maybe a highly populated maple grove - no value to wildlife and just shading out good potential forbs. This may be an area they mark as a reset - to help release some oaks and natural regen in the area - once the non-natives are treated.
Deer make a living at 3ft off the ground and below. If much of the property you are hunting and neighbors you can see a long way- that is not good deer habitat, quail, turkey nesting, etc.
Hope my ramblings help!