Nyboy
Garden Master
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It can handle shade but also does well full sun. The stream banks get sun all day. I found most shade plants can handle sun if they get water
Yes I have sandy soil. My guess though is that in Michigan you have much colder temps.in the winter making the seed unviable. The seed does not come true..it is interesting how different people have such different experiences.
the purple flowering morning glories here have not ever come back from seed as anything other than what they've always been. no mutations noted yet.
@canesisters & @catjac1975 do you have a lot of sand in your soil? around here the places we've grown them in the past are either heavy clay or along the fence in a few spots and of course the gravel mulch. the heavy clay area will sprout new plants any time we've had enough rains. it's been years since we had plants there that were allowed to drop fresh seeds. i scrape them a few times a season and try to pull out any that make it to flowering stage. they can smother the veggies if i don't get them in time. i'm quite happy to use it as worm food... once they get going they seem to do ok in the hard baked clay, but i've not specifically tried to see what happens during a drought if i don't water them because they are pesky plants in the gardens/veggies and i don't have them growing other places that i let go dry. i remove them as soon as i can...
@canesisters how much light are they getting? i'll send you seeds if i can find some this season. i just ripped out some plants from one of the bean gardens, but i think i have a few in the squash patch that i can leave and harvest seeds from... they are purple.
Morning glory stay in check here. also. However it does seem that when they seed themselves they revert to the wild bindweed. That is a horrific invasive barely attractive plant.
it is interesting how different people have such different experiences.
the purple flowering morning glories here have not ever come back from seed as anything other than what they've always been. no mutations noted yet.
Yes I have sandy soil. My guess though is that in Michigan you have much colder temps.in the winter making the seed unviable. The seed does not come true..
Isn't that a shade plant? I'd love some, but almost all of the drive/ditch line is full sun. The only shade it gets if from the overhead power line.
The answer seems to rely on the fact there is MORE THAN ONE species in the mix. The common Morning glory is Impomoea purpurea which, as it's name suggests has purple flowers naturally, so one would EXPECT it to keep them
But a lot of what is grown is Mexican Morning Glory, Impomoea tricolor whose wild form comes in three colors (white, blue and pink). When left to re-breed freely, that one often reverts to it's wild colors (with white being by far the commonest)
What I grew is probably Japanese Morning Glory Impomoea nil. Whether mine are wild type or not I have no idea, but what I got was blue, pink, dark pink, purple, and at least one that was functionally black.
Wow a black Morning Glory !!!!!!!!!!The answer seems to rely on the fact there is MORE THAN ONE species in the mix. The common Morning glory is Impomoea purpurea which, as it's name suggests has purple flowers naturally, so one would EXPECT it to keep them
But a lot of what is grown is Mexican Morning Glory, Impomoea tricolor whose wild form comes in three colors (white, blue and pink). When left to re-breed freely, that one often reverts to it's wild colors (with white being by far the commonest)
What I grew is probably Japanese Morning Glory Impomoea nil. Whether mine are wild type or not I have no idea, but what I got was blue, pink, dark pink, purple, and at least one that was functionally black.