Here's my suggestion. Just sit back and relax. Roll a few cigars of whatever leaf strikes your fancy. Every variety (and every growing season) has different flavor and burn characteristics.
I often stalk-harvest a number of cigar varieties. Once it is color-cured, I strip the leaves from the stalks, and tie them into hands (one or two plants' worth per hand), all stalk levels mixed together. (That's not a problem, because I'm not selling graded leaf to a tobacco market.) After kilning the mixed leaf, I bag it as is. When time comes for rolling a cigar, I just pick around in the bag, and pull something out.
When I "blend" for a cigar, I select some intact leaf for a wrapper and/or binder. The filler is usually comprised of something thin, something large, something dark and full. I find no benefit in obsessing over specific recipes, or in trying to do it like factories do it. I don't care if two consecutive cigars have the same blend, same shape, same size, or same color wrapper. They're for me to smoke, not for selling to a jaded public. AND...I love my cigars.
Bob