>>1416472>oceanic climate?Seems like most anything. When it comes to gardening/farming it just depends on frost for the most part, unless you want to grow tropicals which need the heat. If your area has frost then you plant between the last and first frost dates, finding out how long that is and matching the, "days to maturity," for the cultivars you want to grow. In some latitudes light is a major issue and the growing season will be reduced because of that for some crops. Corn and related crops have a life cycle that is dependent on how long the day is. When days get shorter it triggers various things. If your days get short fairly quick then you need cultivars with shorter growing seasons than your frost dates.
>woodlandIf you can't clear cut to get sunlight into a place, there's not that much you can do. But, nut trees and fruit shrubs are normally good in forests, but will require light. There needs to be a hole in the canopy for that.