Flow Hive


Flow Hive is a beehive designed to allow honey to be extracted simply by turning a lever: the hive does not have to be opened and the bees are not disturbed as in normal extraction.
The frames contain a partially-formed plastic honeycomb lattice with vertical gaps. Bees fill in these gaps with beeswax and the cells with honey. When the mechanism of the frames is activated, the vertical gaps are offset by one half of a cell, breaking the wax seal and allowing the honey to flow down through the cells into a channel at the base of each frame and out into a collection vessel. The system is then reset and the bees remove the capping and refill the cells, beginning the process again.
Some critics question the use of plastic, although plastic foundation is commonly used in conventional beekeeping. The Flow Hive uses food-certified plastic in the honey super only, allowing the bees to produce their own natural wax comb in the brood nest.
The design was copied by Chinese Tapcomb. Co-inventor Cedar Anderson said this copy clearly infringed on their patents, which cover all designs that have split cells to drain honey. TapComb ceased trading in late 2018.

Crowdfunding campaigns

The Flow Hive system was invented in Australia by Cedar Anderson and his father Stuart Anderson. In February 2015, they launched a campaign on crowdfunding platform Indiegogo hoping to raise $70,000 for a custom injection mould. Instead, they raised over $12 million and received nearly 25,000 orders from over 130 countries. The campaign broke several records for Indiegogo, becoming its most successful campaign. By March 2018, 51,000 orders had been shipped.
The Flow Hive 2, which included a number of small improvements, was launched via another crowdfunding campaign in early 2018. The second campaign raised over $14.9 million.

Criticisms of the design

There were speculative criticisms of the design made by beekeeping journalists and bloggers during the first Indiegogo campaign.
While some beekeepers are critical, others note that the Flow Hive simplifies the arduous practice of extracting honey, especially for small beekeepers because expensive extraction equipment is not required. It also seems to be a good starting point for new beekeepers as it simplifies collection and as noted saves on costs.

Impact on amateur beekeeping

In Australia, a rapid increase in new members joining existing beekeeping clubs, the capping of new memberships by some clubs and the establishment of at least one new club have been attributed to the Flow Hive.