Early in the season, I'm usually looking for white oaks that are dropping acorns-a lot of the deer I've killed have had a mouthful of white oak acorns when they died. The best oaks are those little white oak groves that you find sometimes out in the middle of pine woods or somewhere else isolated from other oaks. Later in the season, I'll hunt near red oaks, persimmons, grapes, or green browse.
In general, I like edges and funnels. If I can find a good edge between hardwoods and pines, hardwoods and laurel thicket, grown-up clearcut and woods, or old field and woods, most of the time, deer are traveling it. If I can find a corner in that edge, or a place where two edges intersect, even better. I also like little strips of woods between fields or clearings that connect bigger patches of woods. Another place that always seems to produce in mountains is a low gap in the ridge, especially if it's along a natural edge. I like to hunt fresh tracks better than hunting scrapes or rubs. But if you get lucky and find one of those perfect spots with a lot of tracks, fresh droppings, plus a line of rubs and scrapes in a good natural funnel between a feeding area and a bedding area, it's definitely time to hang a stand.