Morning glory has been a favourite in summer gardens since the 1930s when the sky blue, trumpet-shaped flowers came hit the market. This early-flowering beauty opened the way for hybrids with eight-centimetre-wide (3.25-inch-wide) blossoms in a rainbow of colours.
With options such as white 'Pearly Gates,' purple 'Grandpa Ott's, ' rose 'Scarlett O'Hara,' and 'Crimson Rambler'.
Morning glories are named for the fact that the flowers open in early morning and close by noon, with new buds opening daily. Newer cultivars have been bred to stay open longer, so you can enjoy more of their beauty.
Moonflower (I. alba) is grown for its large, sweet-scented, white flowers, which unfurl at dusk to reveal saucer-like, 15-centimetre-wide (six-inch-wide) blossoms.
This rapid grower can climb to three metres (10 feet) in a growing season and reach 12 metres (40 feet) in frost-free areas.
Japanese morning glories (I. × imperialis) climb to little more than one metre (three feet). They have funnel-shaped flowers up to 15 centimetres (six inches) across in a lovely range of colours from pale pink to deep maroon, often with a white edging.
Many varieties also have leaves variegated with white flecks and splashes. They're easy to grow and particularly stunning when combined with flowering annuals in containers.