Hi! I gave you the first like! I plant moring glories every year because they always grow and are worth planting. I have a whole collection of different varieties of morning glory colours including purple, pink, light pink, magenta, dark purple, white, purple-blue and red and they all are the same specie (ipomea purpurea)! Unlike ipomea tricolor this one develops tiny hairs all over itself that make it invincible to aphits! Young plants have these protective hairs too but they aren't long enough yet to do their job properly and the leaves can be easily damaged by these pests at open areas so make sure to protect them properly. Years of growing this amazing plant made me an expert at it! Now I can even guess correctly the color of the future flowers by the color of the seedling stem!
In this video, during the beginning we see the leaves having yellow patches. I'm having the same problem but the plant itself is growing fine. So should I be worried about it and if so, what should I do?
Hello is there a reason why they don't climb? I've had mine In a 12in tall pot for about a month and it hasn't climbed yet and they are located by a chain link fence. Any suggestions?
@@impeachharrisnow Morning glory plant (ipomea purpurea) starts twisting itself around the closest object it can find only after 3-4 true leaves have grown. Don't expect for it to start climbing from first leaf. If you need any more help with the morning glories, you can always ask me and I will try to help you.
Take some seed pods after the flower drops, little orb shaped fellas.. open up to find 4-8 seeds and bomb them places you'd like to see them growing up. Like a nature-loving vandal
I grow these obsessively past few years, it was nice to see them growing naturally as i can never stop trying to direct mine.. though you cant see the wood fence by the end lf season and it's a hobby
Thanks for uploading this, very helpful. I have some plants growing now, but didn't know that they coil around each other or anything nearby lol. Looks like I need to add a type of wire to the pots or branches.
I grew a morning glory last summer, is grew so big that it covered the windows, but then it died and I felt an emptiness that consumed me, any ways I’m going to try bonsai next since that won’t die on me right?
Morning glory is an annual plant. Maybe yours just naturally died off. As for bonsais, I'm also trying to grow a tree from seed and planning to trim it as a bonsai. I guess after reaching a certain age, it'll be hard to kill. Maybe
@@blackcyklops it really depends on location because yes they are annuals in cold climates but in tropical or subtropical locations they are perennial there are some that are true annuals but many are perennial that’s like saying tomato’s and peppers are annuals mainly because it freezes on those areas don’t get me wrong they can be grown inside and there is a species of perennial morning native in my area that can handle some serious cold and it come back that we call it wild sweet potato or man root which that is ipomea pandurata
I thought my morning glory plant was having nutrient deficiencies but it looks like the plant in the video also has the same kind of yellow patches on its leaves. Is this common for this plant?
One question...if I let my ipomea seeds get wet in heavy rain for almost 2 hours, will they rot or not? Here it rains this intensely every 2-3 days, although sometimes it doesn't rain for a longer period of time, for example once every 3-4 days in this season...
@@Fei_jisoo1407새싹일땐 20ml, 어느정도 크면 15ml 정도로 살짝 젖을때까지만. (제 화분은 이미 꽃이 열개도 넘게 피고 접었어요. 연한 보라색. 꽃색깔을 예측할 수 없어서 재밌죠) 그리고 또 쓰고싶은말은... 깨끗한 수돗물 대신 곡물을 씻은 물을 주면 더 잘자라고,벌레가 너무 많아지면 손빨래하고 남은 물을 살짝 주면 벌레가 사라져요