Depends on what age the surrounding pines are. Pine plantations begin to lose their "attractiveness" to deer once they hit about 15 years of age. Of course, much depends on the planting density and any maintenance done on those pines (thinning, spraying, etc.).
Have a neighbor that clear-cut his 28 acres of hardwoods and planted the whole property in pine seedlings. From the time those pines were 4-5 years old until almost 20 years old they were the hottest thing going in a nearly exclusive hardwood environment. As a hunter, you wanted to be pretty close to that property line! However, after 20 years of age, the deer stopped being drawn to them. Now that adjoining property appears to be less of a draw than my adjoining hardwoods.
I've got some small patches of pines I planted just over 20 years ago. Although those patches are no longer the draw they once were, deer still walk the habitat edge created by the change in species from hardwood to pine.