Bring a camera.
That's some of the most gorgeous country on the planet, almost all redwoods. But for deer hunting it'd be a beast. Lots of very dense timber and vegetation, lots of precipitation, and about 3/4 of it is private land.
That said, a sizable chunk of that private stuff is timber company lands, and most if not all of those timber companies do permit hunting. However, you'll want to double-check in advance, including just right before the hunt - they sometimes close them off due to fire hazard, if it's a bad drought year. You'll definitely want to use OnX, if you want to plan out a hunt.
Your best chances are probably some variant of ambush hunting. It's far more akin to hunting whitetails than muleys. I'd probably start by trying to locate some crop fields, and try to cut sign and a deer trail around that perimeter, then post up in ambush over that trail on a good spot. Same if you can find some places that have recently been logged. Logging cuts can be particularly good deer magnets, given that they produce some of the more tender and tasty new vegetation. Just verify any cuts you hunt for sign first - that landscape is so lush that cuts may not be as much of a draw as they are in other forests.
There's also more open country towards the coast and on some of those slopes, where you might actually be able to do a bit of decent glassing. That said, I'd still walk the edges of that open country at the treeline to try to find the game trails, and try to post up on a good spot near them to glass at dawn and dusk.
It won't be an easy hunt, but it may very well be one of the more enchanting ones you could go on.