>>1141194Since it's going to be dormant soon (yellowing and dropping leaves), you could probably transplant it into the ground and feed it so that it does well in the spring again.
Do you know what variety it is?
>>1141280I'm trying this method this season:
https://www.theartofdoingstuff.com/turns-im-never-really-satisfied-anything-including-tomatoes/It should do well and is pretty simple to set up, they use is it growing commercial tomatoes.
The main difference in my setup is that I have an A-frame at either end of the row and have a rope running between them as an overhead truss.
>>1141396Cute flowers anon, I've got a mix of Marigolds, dill, borage, coriander, cosmos and buckwheat going at the moment to attract some useful critters.
Might be time to get a little beehive soon!
>>1141507An alternative is that you could leave all the plants there and either fertilise them more aggressively or prune them/strip them so they have to support a few less fruit at any given time.
Dynamic lifter used as a "tea" works well for me: a litre of lifter pellets in a 10 L bucket and pour off the liquid when it gets dark into a watering can at about 25% strength. You can reuse the same pellets about half a dozen times before they get kinda spent so it's cheap and effective as well as quick-acting.