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Tackle those hard-to-reach branches with ease and power! The Ryset Telescopic Bypass Lopper is engineered to make pruning larger shrubs and small trees a breeze. By eliminating the structural limitations of standard-length clippers, this advanced tool provides the perfect combination of variable reach and mechanical force, saving you strain and time in the garden.
Featuring adjustable telescopic aluminium handles that extend from a compact 55cm up to a long-reach 95cm, you can effortlessly prune elevated or deep-seated branches without climbing a ladder. The high-performance cutting head utilises a compound action bypass blade system that multiplies your hand force, allowing you to slice through thicker wood growth with a clean, scissor-like action that protects plant health.
Best For: Home gardeners and professionals needing a versatile, powerful lopper to prune thicker live branches in elevated or hard-to-reach areas, making it ideal for large rose bushes, fruit trees, and general landscape maintenance.
Compound Action Force Multiplier: Built with an advanced mechanical compound gear linkage system that exponentially increases your closing pressure, making cuts through tough wood feel significantly easier than with traditional direct-drive loppers.
55cm to 95cm Telescopic Extension: Quickly customise your handle length to optimise your leverage or extend your upward grasp up to 95cm away, ensuring you can manage high tree canopies safely from stable ground footing.
Tissue-Safe Bypass Geometry: Precision-ground blades slice past each other cleanly without crushing live wood fibres, preserving the structural integrity of the branch to foster rapid cell healing and protect against fungal diseases.
Lightweight Aluminium Build: Constructed from premium-grade structural aluminium, the extendable shafts are robust enough for gruelling agricultural workloads while remaining exceptionally light to minimise arm fatigue.
Product Package INCLUDES:
| Specification | Product Detail |
|---|---|
| Brand | RYSET Australia |
| Model Number | GD313 |
| Type | Telescopic Compound Action Bypass Lopper |
| Blade Mechanism | Force-Multiplying Compound Linkage Head |
| Cutting Profile | Bypass (Scissor-Style Clean Slicing) |
| Handle Material | High-Quality Lightweight Structural Aluminium |
| Handle Length Profile | 55 cm (Standard Retracted) extending up to 95 cm (Fully Extended) |
| Maximum Cutting Capacity | Up to 35 mm Diameter (approx. 1.5 inches) |
INFORMATION SHEET - THE OLIVE CENTRE
Girdling is a readily used practice in citrus and stone fruit orchards where it is typically used as a technique to increase fruit size.
Biennial bearing can be a serious problem in olive trees which can result in heavy crop losses to producers. Under non-irrigated conditions, yields can fall substantially or drop to zero making the production year uneconomical to harvest. Girdling may be a practice if done under the right conditions and timing could increase the production of an olive tree.
What does Girdling or cincturing involve?
Girdling also known as cincturing which is a horticultural practice involving eliminating up to a 1.5cm strip of bark around the trunk to stop the translocation of photosynthates to the root system. A girdling knife or cincturing tool is used to cut the bark of the olive tree.
Researchers in Israel* found that 15mm scaffolds covered with CaCO3 mineral oil and wax or PVC cover were most effective in facilitating wound healing. PVC treatment was more rapid in wound healing. During the first prevailing year after girdling found a 40% in increase yield. Another study from Spain~ that looked into optimal widths and timing found that removing a 15mm band of bark 30 days before full bloom increased the fruit weight from 3.9g in the ungirdled trial to 4.7g.
Wounds with untreated scaffolds in the Israel study saw a drop in yield.
The width of the scaffold and healing duration as well as the time of year in which the girdling was carried out all had bearing on an increase or decrease in production. The Israel study found that girdling olive trees increased the yield in the season following treatment with later girdling causing an increase in fruit set only.
Several scaffolds were used in the studies from 30mm to 5mm where the 5mm girdles were reported to heal too quickly and had no effect on increased production.
It was also noted that trees that were about to produce a high yield did not respond to girdling and in some cases actually reduced the yield. Long-term studies need to be conducted to ascertain if alternate scaffold girdling should be considered.
The studies were interesting because there is potential that girdling practiced correctly in an olive grove may have a positive outcome for increased yield output however, the width of the girdle, healing timing, and time of year need to be taken into account when considering employing this technique in a commercial grove and can also have a positive effect on production in the alternate bearing years.
* STUDY
*S. Lavee, A Hadkal, Y Ben Tal
Department ofOiei and Viticulture, ARO, Volcani Center, Bet Dagan, Israel
ABSTRACT
The effect of scaffold girdling on the productivity of olive trees was studied on four cultivars grown under intensive irrigated conditions. Girdling increased the yield when done in midwinter (December-February) and to a lesser extent in April. A girdling width of 10-15 mm covered with PVC tape was most effective and promoted rapid healing. Uncovered girdling wounds healed very slowly, with a resultant decline of the scaffold. Girdling increased both inflorescence formation and fruit set. With cv Manzanillo young scaffolds were more responsive than old ones. The responses of different scaffolds on the same tree to girdling were independent of each other. The degree of response of a scaffold to girdling depended on the potential yield of the scaffold in the year of treatment. No direct prevailing effect of the girdling on of the following year's yield was noted.
Read the full study: Girdling olive trees, a partial solution to biennial bearing. I. Methods, timing and direct tree response: Journal of Horticultural Science: Vol 58, No 2
~ STUDY
López-Rivares, E. P. ; Suárez-García, M. P.
Escuela Universitaria de Ingeniería Técnica Agrícola, Seville, Spain.
ABSTRACT
Six-year-old multi-trunk olive trees (cv. Manzanilla) growing under controlled irrigation in an 'off' year were girdled at monthly intervals from 15 Dec. to 15 Apr., removing 10 mm-wide rings of bark. In a separate trial, trees of the same cultivar growing under similar conditions were girdled by removing a 5-, 10- or 15-mm-wide ring of bark in Apr., i.e. a month before full bloom. Ungirdled trees served as controls. Girdling date had no significant effect on either flowering or fruit set. Removing a 15-mm-band of bark at 30 days before full bloom increased individual fruit weight from 3.9 g in the ungirdled control to 4.7 g.
Read the full study: Olive tree girdling: optimum timing and widths.
SMART PRUNING FOR STRONGER, HIGHER-YIELD OLIVE TREES
By Marcelo Berlanda, Agronomist & Consultant for The Olive Centre
“Olive trees must put out fresh growth each year to produce fruit.”
Training shapes the tree to support efficient harvesting and encourage early production
When trees reach the canopy size best suited to their environment, yields may begin to drop. This often happens because the inner canopy receives limited sunlight, leading to leaf loss and a reduced Leaf-to-Wood Ratio. If a tree grows beyond its ideal size, it creates challenges for mechanical harvesters. Excess height and width, along with thick branches, can strain or damage harvesting equipment, reduce fruit removal efficiency, and slow the harvest. Because olive trees need to produce new shoots annually to maintain fruiting, consistent growth is essential—and pruning becomes an important management practice. Pruning improves fruit size, oil content, light penetration, and the Leaf-to-Wood Ratio. It also stimulates fresh growth and lowers water and fertiliser demand.
1- TREE TRAINING
Purpose: Establish early productivity with stronger yields, extend the productive lifespan of the tree, enhance fruit quality, and prepare trees for the harvesting system used in the grove.
Timing: Training occurs within the first three years of the tree’s development.
In the first year, pruning is minimal (assuming nursery trees arrive with a good structure). Remove lower or overly vigorous branches that compete with the central leader. The goal is to maintain an upright main trunk with outward-growing horizontal branches. Water shoots should be removed so they do not compete for nutrients and moisture.
During the second and third years, gradually remove lower branches below approximately 600–1000 mm.
A balance is essential. Removing too much canopy reduces the tree’s photosynthetic area, slowing its progress until new growth resumes.
Light pruning involves removing only small sections of foliage (such as a few short shoots), which keeps the tree stable. This can be done from August through late May.
Heavy pruning removes larger amounts of foliage, prompting a stronger regrowth response but also increasing frost risk. Heavy cuts should generally be delayed until late September unless conditions are warm enough to begin earlier.
Tree training may also include tying and skirting as part of shaping and preparation.
2- PRODUCTION
Young trees contain many non-productive branches because they are still actively growing. Once these branches mature and begin producing fruit, they eventually become exhausted and stop fruiting. At that point, they need to be removed to make room for new productive growth and renewal of the canopy.
LoIf the bloom is light, pruning should focus mainly on non-productive wood to preserve as much fruiting potential as possible. In years with heavy bloom, pruning can be more assertive without significantly reducing the crop.
Timing: From bud break through early December.
3- AFTER HARVEST (CLEANING)
The goal at this stage is to remove large damaged branches left behind after mechanical harvest. This step can be postponed by applying copper after harvest and waiting until spring to remove the affected wood.
Read More: ● Marcelo Berlanda ● Mechanical Pruning ● Mechanical Harvesting
Marcelo Berlanda’s “Pruning for Production” guide highlighted why olive pruning is vital to sustain yields. This article builds on that foundation, focusing on how to encourage the growth of productive fruiting wood in Australian olive groves.
Olive trees bear fruit on one-year-old shoots – the growth produced in the previous season. Ensuring a steady supply of these young, fruitful shoots each year is critical for consistent yields. Without renewal, canopies fill with aging wood that carries fewer leaves and buds, leading to lower productivity. Pruning is therefore geared toward a few fundamental objectives :
Understanding how and when olive fruiting buds form helps refine pruning practices. Unlike deciduous fruit trees, olives do not have a true winter dormancy – their buds remain in a state of quiescence and will grow when conditions permit. Flower buds initiate relatively late: studies have shown that olive buds begin differentiating into inflorescences about 2 months before bloom (around late winter/early spring in the local climate). This means the buds on this year’s spring flowering shoots were formed in the late summer or autumn of last year, on the previous year’s wood. Crucially, those buds needed sufficient resources and light while they were forming.
Several physiological factors influence fruitful bud development:
Takeaway: Productive fruiting wood arises from a balance – neither too vegetative nor too weak – and it needs sunlight. Pruning is the tool to create that balance by removing what’s unproductive and making space for fruitful shoots under the right environmental conditions.
Having set the physiological context, we now turn to pruning methods that encourage renewal of fruiting wood. The approach will vary with the age of the tree and the orchard system (traditional vs. high-density), but several general principles apply:
By applying these pruning techniques, growers encourage a continuous supply of young fruiting wood while avoiding the pitfalls of over-pruning. The result is a tree that renews itself gradually: always plenty of 1-year shoots ready for the next crop, and no big shocks to the tree’s system.
Olive orchards in Australia range from traditional low-density plantings to modern high-density (HD) and super-high-density (SHD) groves. The principles of fruiting wood renewal apply to all, but the methods and intensity of pruning are adjusted to each system’s needs :
In summary, the pruning strategy must fit the system: gentle but regular for intensive hedges, somewhat heavier but less frequent for large traditional trees, and always aimed at keeping enough young wood in the pipeline. Regardless of system, the fundamentals remain: capture sunlight, encourage new shoots, and remove what’s unproductive.
Pruning not only influences yields – it also plays a significant role in Integrated Pest and Disease Management (IPDM). A well-pruned olive canopy is generally healthier and easier to protect. Here’s how encouraging productive wood ties in with pest and disease considerations:
In summary, a sound pruning regimen is a cornerstone of IPM in olives. It reduces pest and disease pressure naturally by altering the micro-environment and improving the efficacy of other controls. Always balance the need for opening the canopy with the tree’s productive capacity – a healthy medium density (not too sparse) is the target, so that you don’t invite sunscald or stress. With those caveats, pruning is one of the most cost-effective pest management tools a grower has.
Beyond pruning itself, several environmental and cultural factors influence how well an olive tree can produce new, fruitful wood. Understanding these helps growers create conditions that favour the continual renewal of fruiting shoots:
In summary, productive fruiting wood is not just about cutting branches – it’s the outcome of the whole orchard management system. Pruning is the mechanical stimulus, but water, nutrients, and overall tree stress levels determine how the tree responds. The best results come when pruning is synced with these factors: prune to shape the growth, irrigate and fertilise to support it (but not overdo it), and protect the tree from stresses that could derail the process. By doing so, growers in Australia can maintain olive canopies that are youthful, vigorous, and laden with fruitful shoots year after year.
Encouraging productive fruiting wood in olives is both an art and a science. The art lies in “reading” the tree – knowing which branches to remove and which to spare – while the science lies in understanding olive physiology and applying evidence-based practices. In this follow-up to Marcelo Berlanda’s pruning guide, we have underlined the key strategies:
Sources: This article integrates findings from peer-reviewed studies and reputable industry publications, including research by Gómez-del-Campo et al. on light and yield distribution, Tombesi and Connor on pruning and olive physiology, Rousseaux et al. on bud dormancy and flowering, and Australian olive industry resources (NSW DPI, AOA IPDM manual) on best practices. These sources reinforce the recommendations above and ensure advice is aligned with the latest understanding of olive tree management.