Morning Glories in a garden are a usually self seeding annual that thrive on benign neglect. (Don't overwater overfertilize if at all.) If you live in a warmer area they may stick around as a perenial and yes they should still bloom. However be warned that most perennial morning glories are considered a noxious weed. See Convolvulus arvensis and C. Sepium. There are a whole bunch of species in the same family all generally tough and many tough enough to become the bane of the gardener. If you live in colder areas (you get somefreezing), all the perennails will be considered a weed and more or less hated by somebody. Watch for rhizomes sending off shoots yards away from the parent plant.
Yes, very fast, and up just about anything. If they are planted as seeds in early spring, they can grow from 10 to 15 feet by late summer. If you grow these wonderful flowers you will love them because they are very rewarding. Every day i go outside to water them, I see progress. You should water them at night though, because the water will make the blooms wither quicker. The blooms always wither in the afternoon anyway, but the next blooms come during the early morning hours.
No. They just bloom in the morning when the sun comes up. So they just need some but not much sun.
annuals
No, morning glories cannot be forced to flower. In order to get them to bloom on time, make sure you are using a manure based soil.
the morning glories is blue and it usually bloom in the morning but when is noon it die.
no
Morning glories is not a compound word, but lamppost is a compound word.
No.
yah
Morning glories do not have tap roots. In zone 5, it is an annual. So they roots are not that deep.
I've planted seedlings at the end of April and had 3 ft vines by end of May and many blooms by end of June in Staten Island, NY.
morning glories,dandelions,daisies,
Viens like morning glories
Don't pick off the old flowers and they will provide seeds.
It was just nature, like how every person is made.