Hey BigBob,
I'll bite. I hunt in the South East and typically in pine timber that is grown for the purpose of pulpwood. Terrain is usually a mix of these timber hills and hardwood bottoms and draws, where the ground starts getting moist and boggy more suited for oaks and other various hardwoods.
Typically I go out and listen around 4-5 pm most afternoons if I am hunting the next day. I always carry my gun and always wear full camo because you can never tell what will happen if you are walking a logging road or a ridgeline.
I listen for any sign I can of turkeys... gobbling, fly up cackles, wing beats, cutting, yelping, etc... I then make a mental note of where I hear these and try to get near them the next morning.
In the timber, I don't typically find turkeys roosting in a favorite tree like they do in some places, its more of a wherever the urge hits them that's where they fly up. Reason I say that is because I have a good friend that hunts Nebraska every year and the turkeys are field birds and they always go up to the same tree and fly down from the same tree ever night and ever morning.
I hope this helps and