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Dealing with earth bank in back garden

We recently bought a house where the back of the garden backs onto higher ground. There is an earth bank running along the length of the back fence (7.7m across and 0.75m height). We are unsure what to do, raised bed, tiered beds, planting directly into the slope? The garden is south facing but this back end is in shade from the end fence and obviously gets fairly waterlogged from the higher ground behind. Think soil is clay loam. All and any advice would be gratefully received!
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This forum has plenty of members who have dealt with similar problems, l am sure they will be along.
Welcome, by the way !
* Edited to add, if you did decide to do this, you would need to leave an air gap, in other words, a four sided raised bed with a gap at the back, not using the fence as the 4th side. Hope that makes sense. You may decide that's too much of a faff !
"You don't stop gardening because you get old, you get old because you stop gardening." - The Hampshire Hog
https://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/profile?PID=79
Also this re: various tropical style plants for UK gardens
https://www.housebeautiful.com/uk/garden/plants/a555/10-tropical-plants-you-can-grow-in-the-uk/
And the idea of extending out from the bank and jungle type planting sound good again no expert but there are plenty of book's internet and someone on here will be able to help for sure I would put up another discussion in plants asking for advice : )
"You don't stop gardening because you get old, you get old because you stop gardening." - The Hampshire Hog
A row of something like Amelanchiers would make an effective screen, not too dense a canopy on them so they won't cast a huge amount of shade. Great for wildlife - flowers for bees, and fruits later for birds, with lovely autumn foliage. That would leave a few feet for other planting.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...