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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Morning Glory Flowers
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Hi Betsy, according to some comments here, including the one below:
"Submitted by Anonymous on May 17, 2013 - 2:38pm
Yellow leaves are due to over watering, if you have a plastic pot it's probably not getting a good enough drainage. Only water when soil is dry. I have found if you water it to religiously, you will get vine growth but no flowers."
Please help me maybe my soil is too rich or I over fertilized with organic fertilizer but I have no blooms and I want them .....this has never happened before but my garden is better than it ever has been except for this
Hi Susi,
You are right—over fertilizing can lead to disproportionate green growth and a delay in bloom time. Lay off the fertilizer for now. Chances are they will bloom, just a little later than expected.
I have beautiful Morning Glory vines and also climbing beans. However, neither have a blooms on them. When I lived in Georgia I grew everything. I miss my flowers.
Hi Michelle,
They might benefit from quick-release fertilizer applied once a week.
I have a very healthy Morning Glory vine, but had only a very few flowers, and rich now none! What is going on with it and is there anything I can do?
The usual reason that morning glory flowers do not bloom is overfertilization or too much nitrogen in the soil. This results in lots of leaves and few flowers. The prefer full sun, of course, as well. Do not fertilize them nor even water them. They do not like rich soil nor to be nurtured. Then, by late summer, we hope you’ll see some blooms.
The lawn-mowing crew was here yesterday. They weed-whacked the morning glories. There was a bare patch by the steps. For the last two or three years the landlady and my wife had been debating what to do with it. A few weeks ago I finally went to the store and bought some flowers and ended the debate. They were planted late in the season, but the morning glories were just beginning to vine. I looked this morning--AND THEY'D BEEN WEED-WHACKED!!!!! I e-mailed the land-lady. The vines have been cut and the leaves stripped. Are they apt to recover? Will they re-grow next spring?
Hi Allen,
What a shame! The thing is, morning glory vines are annuals, so they don’t typically return the next year. Perhaps you can see if a local nursery has some of a good size—you could get them in the ground now, and with a little TLC, you could enjoy them for the next two-plus months.
I bought a well started Morning Glory this early summer & it had a few blooms at first. Now it is very tall, but there are no blooms at all. Do I fertilize more or what may be the problem. The plant is in the sun for most of the day & we live in N. WI. I've had Morning Glories for a number of years started from seed & have never had this problem.