Here are the spots I expect bedding, or could be turned into bedding...
Green dots signify North wind bedding areas. However, some of the primary bedding along the cattails at the edge of the lake could have bedding in any wind direction.
Blue represents beds used for North, N.East, and East winds,
Red represents beds used for West, N.West, and S.West winds...
Black signifies where I would do some cutting and thicken the woods. The deer bedding on hills will want to be able see down hill, but prefer thick above...
Yellow dots are where I would put water holes... Notice that I thickened around the sides so deer don't see your approach.
Here is where I would consider food plots marked in pink, I would suggest using some type of clover as well as your corn bean rotation.
The aqua spots are where I would consider potential stand sites.. The brown lines represent access to the bottom. I would hunt the top before going to the bottom. access from a neighbors might not be a bad idea to.
Your access down could be bettered if the rought was thickened to avoid deer seeing you. I would add trail cameras on the food plots and maybe a couple doe stands.
Take my advice with a grain of salt, without actually walking the property, I could be missing something. As far as the bedding goes near the lake in the cattail edge, you need to walk that and mark exactly where the beds are and potential ambush spots. Your biggest challenge is not upsetting the high ground deer when you hunt the low country.
In order to succeed in growing large old bucks on this property I think you likely have to make major changes in the way you hunt this property. You have about the best looking property shown in the map and aerial, the only reason deer would not mature here is because pressure is making them vulnerable to the neighbors who shoot anything. The deer would much rather stay where there is very little human intrusion, especially during gun season. I think a plan needs to be made to limet to amount of hunting on the property. I have a similar property that only me and one person hunt ( the land owner ) He used to hunt 2 or 3 times every week and every day gun season... We rarely seen trophy bucks. I talked him into a plan where we only hunt this property every other weekend during bow season and only two or three times gun season and absolutely no drives. within a year we were stating to see mature bucks.
You have to treat your entire property like a sanctuary, but hunt it where and when the timing is right. 10 quality hunts on your property a year is better than hunting it hard all season and not seeing any shooters. I would also keep it to mainly just family and make sure everyone is ok with the plan... Small game hunting, hiking, kids forts, duck hunting, etc.. will all effect the quality of the deer hunting and should be minimized if your main goal is to increase the age class of the resident deer.