I see a lot of "good news/bad news" to this property.
The bad news is that the terrain is fairly complex. It has drainages and steep drop offs that face in every direction which can really complicate surface wind patterns.
And it's also good news that the terrain is complex. Given a certain direction (and speed) of the prevailing wind on a given day, there will almost always be locations on that property that produce up-drafts. I love to find up-drafts. The odds of being winded go way down when you are set up in an area of high air pressure that produces stable winds in an up-draft pattern. If that same stand location had a prevailing wind that was 180 degrees in the opposite direction, the end result would be a down draft. I hate those.
Another thing that complex terrain produces is complicated thermals. Go onto Google Earth and use the function that shows how the sun shines on the terrain over the course of the day. There is a slider that allows you to see which slopes are in the sun and which are still in the shade at any given time of the day. You'll be able to see which slopes are shaded and still in a cooling pattern and which slopes are exposed to the sun and would be in a warming pattern. And you'll also see the lines of contrast of those zones...one zone warming and the adjacent zone is still in a cooling pattern. The areas where those contrasting zones interact can be very tricky for wind. Thats a situation when there can be a world of difference between a cloudy day and a sunny day. Thermal patterns are much more stable on cloudy days.
That property has a ton of headers. Headers are the top of drainages where the steepest part of the drainage terminates. Headers are excellent places to look for stand locations. And where one header is adjacent to another header, so much the better.
I generally don't put a lot of faith that cyber scouting will be a slam dunk on stand placement, but cyber scouting is a good place to start. Nothing beats boots on the ground but looking at it on maps and imagery is a good way to narrow things down.
Looking at your map, if I were to go hunt it, I'd 1st go to some of those headers. One in particular that grabs me is that one in the NW corner that I pinned. It looks like it has a lot going for it. Access may be a challenge but there is a drainage that leads up to it...that drainage that meets Sharps Run Rd at the 90 degree bend might be a decent access to get up to where I placed that NW pin. Drainages can be good access routes if they keep you hidden. And in the pre-dawn morning when the air is still and under a falling thermal, you will be traveling thru the safest area to avoid odor busts. If there is a shallow creek to walk, it's even better. The flip side to access via drainage is there is often a lot of obstacles. Logs and stuff tend to accumulate in drainages.
I have a great access route up a drainage. It's a narrow slot 75 feet deep below the woods above. I can walk it and no deer above me knows I'm walking past. The only problem with that route is along the way, there is a 10 foot waterfall. It's under-cut, and basically a dead-end box canyon with no way around it. I built a ladder. I've used that access for years. I really feel sneaky when I'm creeping up there in the pre-dawn...down low and out of sight, no ground scent left behind, and at the lowest point in the thermal air flow. I love it!
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