in my bedroom
George and Lennie hide in an irrigation ditch to escape from a confrontation that arose from Lennie's unintentional actions. They hope to avoid trouble and to find a safe place to hide until they can figure out their next steps. This allows them to temporarily evade any potential consequences of Lennie's behavior.
go hide in the bush until george come for him
the bushes
In "Of Mice and Men," George tells Lennie to go hide in the brush in Chapter 1, on page 15. This happens after Lennie panics and holds on too tight to a woman's dress, prompting George to advise him to hide if anything goes wrong.
Told him to hide in the brushes where they slept
He tells Lennie that he won't say a word when they see the boss, and he says that if Lennie gets in trouble, he should go hide in the brush where they are right now.
George. After Lennie accidentally killed Curleys wife and went to hide in the brush (a place where George and Lennie agreed to meet in case of trouble) Curley and the guys set out to kill Lennie for what he did. George, not wanting Lennie to die like that, told Lennie the story of the house they planned on having. while telling Lennie he shot him in the back of the head.
In Chapter 5 of "Of Mice and Men" by John Steinbeck, Lennie is hiding in the brush by the Salinas River after accidentally killing Curley's wife.
George tells Lennie to go back to the brush by the river and hide if he gets in trouble.
when Lennie does something really bad he is supposed to go hide in the brush where they had camped the night before they went into work.
George told Lennie to flee to the clearing by the river and wait for him to come get him, if Lennie got into any trouble. George and Lennie spent the night in the same clearing on their way to the ranch/farm.
George told the guys that Lennie went south to the brush to search for his puppy. However, in reality, Lennie accidentally killed Curley's wife and then fled to the same spot to hide as he was instructed by George earlier.