Flow Hive honey-on-tap beehive is a crowd-funding sensation

By Scott Hannaford
Updated March 17 2015 - 10:08am, first published March 5 2015 - 11:01am
The sweet smell of success: The flow hive has been featured in publications including <i>Forbes</i> and <i>Wired</i> magazines.
The sweet smell of success: The flow hive has been featured in publications including <i>Forbes</i> and <i>Wired</i> magazines.
Sweet success: Father and son inventors Stuart and Cedar (left) Anderson.
Sweet success: Father and son inventors Stuart and Cedar (left) Anderson.
Sweet success: Father and son inventors Stuart (right) and Cedar Anderson.
Sweet success: Father and son inventors Stuart (right) and Cedar Anderson.
The sweet smell of success: The flow hive has been featured in publications including <i>Forbes</i> and <i>Wired</i> magazines.
The sweet smell of success: The flow hive has been featured in publications including <i>Forbes</i> and <i>Wired</i> magazines.
Sweet success: Father and son inventors Stuart and Cedar (left) Anderson.
Sweet success: Father and son inventors Stuart and Cedar (left) Anderson.
The sweet smell of success: The flow hive has been featured in publications including <i>Forbes</i> and <i>Wired</i> magazines.
The sweet smell of success: The flow hive has been featured in publications including <i>Forbes</i> and <i>Wired</i> magazines.
Sweet success: Father and son inventors Stuart and Cedar (left) Anderson.
Sweet success: Father and son inventors Stuart and Cedar (left) Anderson.

It was supposed to be a modest campaign by a father and son to raise $70,000 so they could start producing and selling a new type of beehive they had invented.

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