Try the plant known as bearberry (Mahonia repens) if you live in a relatively cool climate.
2006-06-22 14:49:54
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answer #1
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answered by skeptic 6
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Nothing living, however, if you wish to look at a different side of gardening, why not start a fungus garden? Get a few logs of different trees, and put them under the hedge. Go to your local woods several times in the year to see what fruiting fungi there are, and collect a few mature specimens and put them amongst the logs. Water occasionally, but wait to see what might develop. Some of the fungi that grow on decomposing wood are really interesting and exciting - a conifer hedge is , admittedly dull but if you are stuck with one - make the best of it.
We did have a spectacular tropeoleoum growing through our conifer hedge at a previous address in Northumberland UK - that's just an afterthought
2006-06-26 11:01:43
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Lots of conifers create (as others have said) a very shaded canopy for whatever grows under them. And some make the soil more acid as time goes by. But some things naturally do grow under them. I suggest that you look for these things growing under similar species in the wild. Many mosses do grow under conifers, and do make a very nice carpet if you can get them to grow. Watering them generously, (and particularly during their establishment in a new site) will help them to begin feeling at home under your hedge, and will also cover any chemical abnormalities that the new site may have and which might cause the new moss to abstain from growing (or even establishing) at all. They often grow best in a thick carpet of their peers. Adding some humus underneath as a base layer might aid in establishing a strange moss.
This might be worth a try - don't just dismiss it as too unusual to try.
2006-06-22 16:31:46
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answer #3
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answered by ghart27 3
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it is dry and dark under it, probably. if it is so try some really dark loviing ferns or creepers, and water them and they will form a nice green carpet - cant tell u species, becaus i dont know where i are from - climate, region..
NEVER venus fly trap - oh LOL LOL - IT IS SUN LOVING WETLAND PLANT, like most other carnivorous plants...
strawberries yes, if u water them, bu u will not make them produce a single fruit in the dark
2006-06-22 08:26:04
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answer #4
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answered by iva 4
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Probably not. They have roots as long as the tree is tall and they drain all the moisture and nutrients out or the soil. We have a row down one side of our property and it's always dry under them and there's nothing will grow there.
2006-06-22 06:06:01
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answer #5
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answered by angelcake 5
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Probably a venus fly trap, Pitcher Plants or sundews because they live off insects
2006-06-22 06:39:39
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answer #6
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answered by centenial 2
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Probably small or creeper plants like strawberries.
Or, perhaps a shrubbery... ni! (Sorry, Monty Python joke)
2006-06-22 05:47:54
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answer #7
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answered by hasina_ghani 3
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Dryopteris is a great fern good in dry and shaded areas
2016-05-20 11:24:14
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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weeds
2006-06-25 11:18:15
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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