My Blue Girl Story
Joe Truskot, Master Rosarian, Salinas, California, June 1,
2025
My first encounter with Blue Girl was during a photo shoot
for a local news magazine. She stood out among a crowd all vying for the prized
cover shot. She was tall. She was different. She seemed to dance in the gentle
afternoon wind, and that captured my attention. Every click that camera made of
her in the warm sun produced an eye-popping image. As I approached her, I was
smitten. Her form was voluptuous, her color soft yet intense. She was fragile
but had great substance. Her fragrance was intoxicating. I had to have her. Blue
Girl needed to be mine.
Serendipitously, Blue Girl showed up on the Rose Society raffle
table, and I won her. She lived in that same pot for the rest of that year as I
prepared a weed-infested corner of my yard for her. The ridding of weeds from that
plot took much longer than I thought … nearly three years. Blue Girl prospered
the first two seasons in the pot, but when I tried to move her, I realized she
was doing well because her roots had come through the drain hole and found some
delicious soil. I moved the pot, cut off the exposed root, and her health took
a plunge.
Finally, the ground was ready for a new resident. The hole
was dug wide and deep with a couple of dried rack-of-lamb bones tossed into the
bottom. As I lifted Blue Girl out of the pot, my hand slipped, and the entire
rose fell four feet to the ground, breaking off half the bush. I did a nice
clean prune and planted the remainder in the prepared soil. She made it through
the rest of that season no worse for the trauma.
Spring came, and the weeds were back. When I went to prune her a little bit, I
realized that my mow-blow-and-go team had gotten there first and had weed-whacked
the side of her strongest cane. Roses don’t heal from those wounds. So I cut
the cane back to below the shreds of the scraped side – three inches protruding
from the soil, now matching the stub I cut last fall when I dropped the plant.
I cleared more grass and weeds so the weed wacker would
never get close again, watered, gave them some alfalfa, and let the sun shine
on them. A week later, two canes had popped out, and a future for Blue Girl was
assured.
My house is seventy years old, and although I’ve made many
improvements over the years, the time was past due to fix the rotten and
leaking window frames. The actual windows were replaced with Milgard ones
twenty years ago, but what they were set into was now rotten and had to be replaced.
After several interested contractors never returned with quotes, fortune finally
showed in my favor. I engaged the best team of repairers I’ve ever experienced.
These guys knew what to do and how to do it quickly and within just two days. I
was so pleased to have this dangerous maintenance chore completed so
beautifully.
When I went to admire one of the three fixed windows, I
looked down and realized that was where Blue Girl was. Those two new canes
coming from the stubs of what was once a beautiful rose bush looked dried out
and forlorn. Like all rose enthusiasts, I knew it was a downside of growing
roses. Sometimes the bushes you love just don’t make it. I began to think of
other roses I might now put in that ideal spot. Many new varieties exist and
are often better than those from the past. I was set on investigating something
new.
After a couple of weeks and no sign of life up top from Blue
Girl, I explored underground. It looked like something was happening beneath
the soil line. Could that be a basal break? Sure enough, after being discarded,
abandoned, broken, slashed, stepped on, and mourned over, Blue Girl was
returning to life.
.JPG) |
Blue Girl, hybrid tea, 1964 |
Here’s more information. Blue Girl was introduced in 1964 by
the famous German hybridizing family, Kordes. Blue Girl is a deep lavender, hybrid
tea rose released in the United States under that semi-prurient name in 1964,
but introduced in Germany as Kölner Karnival (Cologne Carnival). Curiously,
Carnival is a season celebrated in the City of Cologne and much of the
Rhineland from November 11 up to Shrove Tuesday, the day before Ash Wednesday,
with a break for Advent, Christmas, New Year's Day, and the Epiphany. The
largest celebration takes place on Rosenmontag or Rose Monday, the day before
Mardi Gras. Giving Blue Girl the name Cologne Carnival in Germany by the top
rose hybridizers in Germany indicates the Kordes family thought it a superior
creation.
In the American Rose Society’s 2021 Handbook for Selecting
Roses, Blue Girl is given the non-distinguished rating of 6.8. It appears to
have been out of favor for a period and has regained some popularity. It isn’t
listed in the 2014 Handbook at all.
The lesson of this story is that as long as you have a
healthy root system and a quality graft sitting in a well-watered, well-drained
soil, a rose bush has remarkable resilience.
As it turned out in that photo shoot, which occurred years
ago now, my enthusiasm for Blue Girl’s photogenic qualities didn’t win over the
editor, and some other picture ended up the cover girl.