The prevailing ideology on the board where I participated when I started with the pipe strongly supported smoking only untopped/uncased tobacco, and for the most part I've followed this, 1792 the only strong exception. But this didn't keep me from loving University Flake, and others, that although topped, are not flavored to an extent or in a manner to stir an objection. Pembroke for instance has cognac topping, but I loved it anyway, and I joined my tobacconist in praising it. Thus my aversion to topped tobacco could be overcome though I stayed within the culture of the board.
Lakelands faired much less well, as they do in this thread, but they are loved in the UK from what I know. Certainly they are loved by enough pipe smokers somewhere to support their manufacture by the very large SG/GH (do they have a new name?). The scented Lakeland blends use flavorings unique to themselves and in combination and in an amount outside the realm of non-Lakeland cultural preference. But the way they are derided, the way they are scorned, derives not from an inherent fault but instead from the clash of one culture against the next. To say that the preference of self in comparison to another derives from objective fact vs subjective preference is the arrogance of ego and takes the smaller, narrower view. And to say that topped tobacco should be categorically rejected on the same grounds also suffers from the egotistical, narrow view.
But say your piece and disparage topped tobacco and the scented Lakelands, but say it with the addition that this is your subjective view. Like what you smoke and smoke what you like supports the central truth that tobacco preference is subjective. Meanwhile, I will probably continue smoking natural tobacco, as that is my preference. For instance when I read about the selections for the C and D Tobacco Crawl, I was less interested in those that are topped.
We are very fortunate that they are so many, many blends available to us that choice becomes difficult, and with literally thousands? of blends, that it would take even a practiced smoker decades to go through all of them to find those that he especially favored; and it would be very easy for him to get lost in variation along the way. I favor GLP's blends, overall, as his tobacco have a deft flavor formulation and sell for less than their value. But I came to this conclusion in an environment where his tobacco is widely available. But had I lived in the UK where Lakelands were similarly available, and if the UK pipe board to which I belonged had a strong component of smokers who loved the scented Lakelands, they might have been my tobacco favorites.
Condor qualifies as a scented Lakeland and might be called a crossover blend straddling Ireland and the US, and many other countries. It has a following on this board and perhaps would have more disciples were it not that its purchase requires a more complex international buy and also a price @ ~$20.00 that is twice the price of the same amount of tinned tobacco, at which many balk, including me. But with help from klause who sent me, unasked, and such is the valor of pipe forum members, 75g, my eyes were opened to this dark, flavored, complex, and by comparison to other strongly scented Lakelands, moderately scented plug; and I bought a plug or two. I believe that its scent is Rose Geranium and would have bought 500g of Dark Plug Rose Geranium were it not for the price, as I crave this sent. At any rate, if you like the potency that I would rate as a step up from Old Dark Fired but hardly that of Dark Flake or brown and black rope, and are bold enough to assay a lower-toned Lakeland of a more tolerable amount of scenting, I'd urge you to give Condor a try, or perhaps Coniston.