>>1285973That looks fine for most any grazing livestock. Sheep will love it. If you have a scrubby area or with trees and lots of undergrowth, that plus the pasture would be ideal for goats.
>>1285969>why are my eggplant and bell peppers not growing?Wait longer, but also check the nutrients in the soil with a liquid test kit. You'll learn a lot and know what you should be adding or not adding.
>>1285989Food or ornamental?
Bleeding Heart for ornamental. (pic of mine this spring) Azaleas and rhododendrons are great too, though more light often means more blossoms. For food, blackberries/raspberries, rhubarb, currants, and Alpine strawberries can be grown in those conditions well.
>>1286013They look fine for plants you have been removing the leaf suckers from. they always grow crazy tall when you do that. Keep in mind you may run out stake eventually. What you can do is once the tomatoes are ripe, you can remove that truss and the leaves below it then put a second steak in the ground a short distance away. Then detach the tomato from one stake and move it to the second. This lowers the top of the plant while laying the leafless section on the ground. It is easier when you have the tomato plant on a string and can simply slide it over without removing it from something.
For cherry tomatoes, the best method I've found was to allow several suckers to grow on it very low on the plant. Then allow those to fall over and run out away from the plant, pile them over with soil or mulch, and train them up a stake as they grow. I end up with a massive plant doing that.
>tfw about to go tie up 100 tomato plants right now