And night crawler earthworms that look like snakes. I need to get back into fishing.
Most of the leaves are water oak, and not particularly good mulch because of the very high pH. But I do have a rather large mound of the stuff that I feed into the compost pile along with all the kitchen vegetable waste, and some chips as well to help keep the soil loose. The acids from the decaying vegetable matter and green plants balance out the high pH from the leaves. I've been pushing that stuff into some big washes in my back yard since 2004. Takes a bit to convert it to useful soil, but I'm getting the hang of it. Having the tractor has sped that process up a little, for sure. Still have to wait for stuff to rot, though.
A general rule of thumb is that the more useful or powerful a piece of equipment is, the more dangerous it is. Some folks think me a know-it-all or patronizing when I point out safety things. No, I never have the intent to challenge anyone's intelligence, I'm just giving a gentle nudge that what they're doing can get them killed in the blink of an eye, and a suggestion to be careful. I survived a 40-year Electrical Engineering career working around high voltage equipment, and ALWAYS appreciated it when someone gave me a reminder that death was waiting with sharp pointy teeth. That was almost a daily conversation. Not because I'd forgotten, but because it kept me from becoming desensitized to the dangers or becoming complacent. I'm damned sure not going to intentionally do something stupid with a tractor at this juncture in life. I'm hoping to live to be 103 and be shot by a jealous boyfriend.