Free: Contests & Raffles.
get yourself a good climber tree stand (I like the summit goliath, not for the increased max weight but for the extra platform space). Scout for a good place to hang it and have faith. You can use similar methods to stand hunting whitetails - just don't expect to see as many deer. You won't likely get into bow range of a good BT that knows you are there.
Weather generally keeps them moving throughout the day. I hunt all day unless the weather is just brutally dry making it impossible to hunt the timber. Cuts for the first and last hour or so of daylight, hitting the timber in between. Head into the timber 150-200 yards or so from the edge of clear cuts and parallel it. They don't often bed much further in the timber unless they've been shoved hard. Just take your time still hunting through there. Midday glassing reprod can produce. Keep your eyes out for anything, an ear, leg, tail, antler, whatever. The big bucks won't be bedded in the wide open. You can also move a hundred yards or so and get a completely different angle into the thick stuff. You'd be surprised what you spot that you couldn't see from the other angle.You're in a good area for deer numbers, but it gets a LOT of pressure. The big bucks don't get big in that unit unless they're extremely smart and elusive.