Always worth growing some larches. Is it tamarack where you are, or European larch? They are useful trees - quite apart from the autumn colour display (unusual in a conifer) they are used to make bonsais and the resin is edible and medicinal. The tree has been used in shamanic magic, (for working with the earth/water interface and for world-tree magic), and in medicine, incense, perfumery and cosmetics, as well as being used in boat building, houses and as fence posts because it is quite waterproof.
Do larches where you are have the symbiotic bolete fungi? If they do, those are delicious. Unfortunately, larches are also vulnerable to a number of parasitic fungi, some of which can cause wood rot, or even kill them. But they are lovely trees so worth finding out what the local rules are for where you can grow them.