Flower

A flower is a naturally occurring plant that occurs in a variety of shapes and colors.

Natural generation
Most flowers generate naturally on dirt and grass blocks. Even in a biome covered with snow, flowers generate naturally on dirt blocks with grass, despite the adjoining dirt blocks being covered with snow.

Dandelions, poppies, blue orchids, alliums, azure bluets, red and white tulips, and oxeye daisies can be found in woodland mansions.

Poppies, dandelions, and azure bluets can be found in plains villages.

Dandelions can be found in savanna villages.

Poppies can be found in taiga and snowy taiga villages.

Obtaining
Flowers can be broken instantly with any item or by hand. Harvesting a flower with shears consumes the durability of the shears for no additional benefit.

A flower also breaks if water runs over its location, or if a piston extends or pushes a block into its location.

$$, if water or a piston enters a flower's location when it is already occupying the same space as a snow layer, the flower is lost.

Drops
Iron golems drop 0 to 2 poppies upon death. This is unaffected by the Looting enchantment.

Any mob killed by the wither drops one wither rose upon death. If possible, the wither rose is placed on the block where the mob died. If the flower cannot be placed there, or if is set to , the flower is dropped as an item instead.

Villagers
$$, baby villagers may give a poppy to players with the Hero of the Village effect.

Trading
All flowers except for the wither rose can be sold by the wandering trader for an emerald.

Bone meal
When bone meal is applied to a grass block, flowers have a chance of generating instead of tall grass on the targeted block and adjacent grass blocks up to 7 blocks away in both directions (a 15x15 square). The generated flower depends on both the biome and the X/Z coordinates (see below).

When bone meal is applied to a single high flower, more flowers appear around it without grass. This does not apply to wither roses.

When bone meal is applied to a double flower, a second double flower spawns as an item.

Flower biomes
This table shows the types of flowers that can naturally generate in each biome, as well as the types that can spawn from bone meal. Flowers marked with "generation" can spawn only when the world is initially generated.

Flower gradients
When flowers spawn from bone meal, the type spawned depends on the X/Z position in the world. Different biomes result in slightly different behaviors. Note that these behaviors don't necessarily match naturally generated flowers since additional randomness is applied during terrain generation.

In a flower forest, any given coordinate can spawn only one type of flower, resulting in a gradient (pictured below). This gradient runs from dandelions, poppies, alliums, azure bluets, red tulips, orange tulips, white tulips, pink tulips, oxeye daisies, cornflowers to lilies of the valley.

In plains and sunflower plains, a similar but more nuanced effect occurs, called the tulip/non-tulip gradient (also pictured below). Each coordinate in these biomes spawn either tulips exclusively, or non-tulips exclusively. The color of a tulip or type of non-tulip is determined randomly and can vary between subsequent bone meal uses, but a non-tulip block never spawns a tulip, and a tulip block never spawns anything but tulips.

No other biome has a gradient; swamps can spawn only blue orchids, while all other biomes can spawn only dandelions and poppies.

Generation of dandelions and poppies in jungle variants and savanna variants (but not shattered savanna variants) are twice as common as in other biomes. Some other biomes, such as deserts, badlands, mushroom fields and their respective biome variants require bone meal to grow poppies and dandelions.

Usage
All flowers can be used as decoration or crafted into dyes, as well as planted on grass or dirt. Wither roses can also be planted on netherrack or soul sand. One-block-tall flowers can be planted in a flower pot. Some flowers can be used to craft suspicious stew.

Because flowers are non-solid transparent blocks, they can be used (like torches) to break falling objects such as sand.

Double tall flowers have a disproportionately large hitbox compared to other plants, which is a feature intentionally programmed into the game. The only exception to this rule is tall seagrass.

Bees
Bees engage in a pollinating behavior with flowers, increasing the honey level in beehives and bee nests by 1.

Navigation
Sunflowers always face east, making them useful for navigation if the sun is not visible.

Breeding
Dandelions can be used to breed, grow and lead rabbits. Any flower can be used for bees.

Damaging
Wither roses inflict the Wither status effect to any players or non-immune mobs touching it, dealing damage every half second. The effect lingers for 1 second after the player/mob leaves its block space. Wither skeletons, the wither, and the ender dragon are not affected due to their Wither immunity.

Suspicious stew
All small flowers can be used to create suspicious stew. When a flower is used on a brown mooshroom, the brown mooshroom produces a suspicious stew related to that flower the next time it is milked with a bowl. The mooshroom returns to producing mushroom stew until fed another flower.

Using different flowers results in different effects.

Composting
Placing a flower into a composter has a 65% chance of raising the compost level by 1.

Block data
In Bedrock Edition, red flower and double plant uses the following data values:


 * Red Flower


 * Double Plant

Trivia

 * Due to the nature of the flower generation algorithm, it is possible (but relatively rare) to find naturally-generated flowers and grass in lava, caverns or abandoned mineshafts. Also, it is possible to find flowers and wheat seeds dropped as an item on the ground naturally, due to failure to generate on an acceptable block.
 * Peonies were used at Jeb's wedding.
 * Rose bushes do not apply damage when walked through, despite roses having thorns.
 * Allium is a genus composed of bulb vegetables such as onions, garlic, and related vegetables, which have large, pink inflorescences resembling that of the flower item.
 * Despite being called "White Tulip", the white tulip is used to make light gray dye.