Flower Pot

A flower pot is a decorative block that can contain flowers, bamboo, saplings, cacti, mushrooms, fungi, and other reasonably sized plants.

Natural generation
Flower pots naturally generate in witch huts where they contain a red mushroom, the basement of igloos where they contain a cactus and in woodland mansions, where they contain birch saplings, dark oak saplings, dandelions, poppies, blue orchids, alliums, azure bluets, red and white tulips, and oxeye daisies.

Flower pots containing a dandelion can be found in some plains and savanna village houses. Flower pots containing a cactus or a dead bush can be found in some desert village houses. Flower pots containing a spruce sapling can be found in taiga village mason houses. Flower pots containing a poppy can be found in taiga village churches.

Breaking
Flower pots can be mined instantly using any tool or without a tool.

A flower pot drops itself as an item (any plant or mushroom in it separately) when pushed by a piston or washed away with water.

Lava can flow into the space of a flower pot, destroying it.

Usage
A flower pot can be used to hold mushrooms, fungi, and various plants. Plants that can be in a pot include any one block high flowers, saplings, ferns, dead bushes, cacti, bamboo, Azaleas and roots.

Plants can be removed by using the interact button.

$$, flower pots can be placed on any block, or over air.

$$, they must be placed on top of a full-block top surface, or the top of a fence, stone wall, or hopper. They cannot be placed on slabs and stairs unless those blocks are upside-down.

Flower pots are $3/8$ of a block high and can be stepped on. It is not possible to walk from the top of a flower pot onto a full sized block without jumping. It is possible to jump from a flower pot onto a fence. The plant or mushroom can be removed from the flower pot by pressing the control. This places the item directly back into the player's inventory. While this behavior is inconsistent with other blocks such as sweet berry bush, it is in fact completely intended.

They can be used to display cacti and wither roses without inheriting their damaging properties.

Potted warped fungus can be used to repel hoglins.

ID




Metadata
$$, flower pots use the following data values:

Block states
$$, flower pots use the following block states:

Block data
$$, flower pot has a block entity associated with it that holds additional data about the block.

See Bedrock Edition level format/Block entity format.

Trivia

 * The flower pot is based on a suggestion from Reddit, like ender chests and item frames.
 * Flower pots break falling blocks.
 * If a plant that has been named is put in a flower pot, the plant loses its name.
 * The inside of the flower pot in Java uses the center 4x4 pixels of the dirt texture while Bedrock uses the center 6x6.