I guess the trouble with a hedge is that it might look completely different from different angles if you are too close to it. I mean a brick wall is nice and flat and whatever angle you look at it from you will see the same faces of the same bricks, but if you stand 3m from a hedge to take a photo, then move 4m along the hedge and look back, you will see the leaves etc (whatever hedges have) probably on their other sides, and not much will match. The matches you do get may be false ones.
The people doing aerial forestry scans probably know more about this sort of thing, but i know another problem with vegetation is that it moves between photos!
Also like you say it's all a bit samey.
Perhaps you should increase the frequency of images in the non-urban areas.
What sort of camera setup are you using, is it fisheyes, wide angles etc? And what interval of shooting and speed of travel are you using?
Ground control markers might help align images that otherwise wont align or align badly, but that's going to introduce a lot of manual work. Otherwise markers will help you scale and orient your data, and if you have enough of them you can optimise to remove non-linear distortions caused by slight errors in the alignment, but i dont think it would have much impact on the shape of your hedges.