Common Morning Glories (Ipomoea purpurea) are beautiful flowers and if trained to a metal frame, they might be kept as a houseplant if given plenty of light (6 or more hours per day). However, please keep in mind that the Morning Glory is a fast growing vine (2-3 meter or 6-9 feet) . It can get to be uncontrollable very quickly - that's why it is called an seriously invasive weed. What I like to do is have them growing on a frame totally enclosing the outside of my bedroom window. It provides shade and humidity in the late afternoon, and I love the scratchy whispers they make in the breeze.
Yes, morning glories thrive in full sun.
You can grow in both using the seed from where you go buy in store and from the seed or pollen of the plant
no
Morning glories are named for their tendency to bloom in the morning, but some varieties may also bloom in the afternoon or evening.
It is illegal to grow most species of morning glories in Arizona due to their classification as a noxious weed.
Morning glories typically bloom for one day, with each flower opening in the morning and wilting by the evening.
Morning glories is not a compound word, but lamppost is a compound word.
No.
yah
Morning glories may not bloom due to factors such as insufficient sunlight, excessive nitrogen in the soil, or being planted too deeply. It is also possible that the plant is not mature enough to bloom yet.
Morning glories do not have tap roots. In zone 5, it is an annual. So they roots are not that deep.
Morning glories typically bloom in about 2 to 3 months after planting the seeds in your garden.