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  2. Annoying Neighbors? These Privacy Plants Guarantee You’ll ...

    www.aol.com/best-plants-enlist-ultimate-privacy...

    Hydrangeas come in an array of sizes and colors, but the large ones top out at 8 to 10 feet tall and wide. They make an absolutely stunning hedge when planted en masse.

  3. Best trees for privacy: 10 ways to screen a plot from view - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/best-trees-privacy-10-ways...

    Take time to consider which are the best trees for privacy in your garden. Hornbeam (Carpinus betulus) can be grown as a tree or a hedge, but it must be pruned in midsummer to keep control of the ...

  4. Leyland cypress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leyland_cypress

    Their rapid, thick growth means they are sometimes used to achieve privacy, but such use can result in disputes with neighbours whose own property becomes overshadowed. [3] The tree is a hybrid of Monterey cypress (Cupressus macrocarpa) and Nootka cypress (Cupressus nootkatensis). It is almost always sterile, and is propagated mainly by cuttings.

  5. High trees have made for great neighbors for the past 35 years

    www.aol.com/high-trees-made-great-neighbors...

    While the owls are longtime residents, the others are pretty new to the neighborhood as far as Marty and I know.These neighbors sleep in our back yard, look in our windows and make themselves ...

  6. Spite fence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spite_fence

    A spite wall in Lancashire, England, built in 1880 by the owner of the land on the left, in reaction to the unwanted construction of the house on the right [1]. In property law, a spite fence is an overly tall fence or a row of trees, bushes, or hedges, constructed or planted between adjacent lots by a property owner (with no legitimate purpose), who is annoyed with or wishes to annoy a ...

  7. Taxus baccata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxus_baccata

    T. baccata is extremely shade-tolerant, with the widest temperature range for photosynthesis among European trees, able to photosynthesize in winter after deciduous trees have shed their leaves. [2] It can grow under partial canopies of beech and other deciduous broad-leafed trees, though it only grows into large trees without such shade.