@mso489 Pretty similar here. I like the occasional Va or English, but my go to blends are all either burley or Ky dark fired, or blends that include them as more than just a minor player: HH Burley, Bold Ky, ODF, OJK, etc. And any OTC codger blend.
Yes I agree. it is sort of a wholesome smoking experience if that makes any sense. Sort of satisfying like a nice chunk of bread at a restaurant when you walk in hungry as hellso far my favorite is burly flake #5 it reminds me in some odd ways of an English but not quite. In some certain weird way I kind of find burly to be a more comforting smoke then other tobaccos. Kind of like snack food where I don't suss out all the nuances but find it incredibly enjoyable.
I think this is a great thing to say about C&D. I am smoking C&D variants almost exclusively, with the addition of Daughter's & Ryan and 5 Brothers. C&D is a solid American flavor. Which blends from C&D? Old Joe Krantz on the daily and Haunted Bookshop once in a while. Virginias rip me open in the mouth.Since this is a burley thread, I feel I should acknowledge Cornell & Diehl for their role in bringing along burley from the OTC codger blend category to a fine array of blends, with burley as base or condiment, that awakened the pipe smoking community to the range of possibilities of burley. Burley has been present in blends forever, but C&D made it notable and respectable in a way it hadn't been and still brings forth new variations on its use. GLP, Mac Barens, D&R, Lane, and Sutliff all contribute and have for decades, but C&D really advanced the cause from its Pennsylvania and North Carolina days, before being bought by Laudisi, which has intelligently and ably carried on the expanded and elevated use of burley.