Harvesting honey has been a sticky, messy job that's changed very little from the earliest days of beekeeping. But it's about to get a whole lot cleaner with the Flow Hive, an ingenious re-engineering ...
Third-generation beekeeper Cedar Anderson was frustrated by the labour-intensive process of extracting honey from his hives. So, in 2015, he and his father set about developing a device that could ...
We all know that winners of A Weedy Garden Makeover receive a brand-new Flow Hive—but what we didn’t expect was that Pam, our latest winner, already had what she thought was a Flow Hive. Unfortunately ...
Splitting a hive is something quite simple and easy you can do to expand your apiary. This video follows the splitting of a flow hive, and relocating the bees to a new hive in the garden. Read more ...
On their website, the Flow Hive had been advertised by their inventors to provide honey “on tap” in a way that was “less stressful for the bees” than traditional methods. Designed with parts that ...
“People talk about colonising Mars; our vision is for a world no one would want to leave”, says the company’s CEO and co-inventor. Newrybar-based company Flow is the business behind the Australian ...
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Crowdfunding platform Indiegogo has been abuzz about the Flow Hive, an invention that aims to help beekeepers better harvest honey.
Humans have been keeping bees for thousands of years. The process of extracting honey from hives has always been laborious, messy, time-consuming, and occasionally painful for beekeepers. It’s also a ...
Unprocessed, single-frame honey allows for greater flavour retention, according to Flow Hive CEO Cedar Anderson, who told FoodNavigator his invention is adding value to the boutique honey market. Flow ...
When Cedar Anderson invented the Flow Hive, a revolutionary new way to harvest honey, he never imagined the impact it would have on his life. Cedar and his father Stuart had tinkered away at the ...