Your crop is looking great.  Congratulations on your endeavor.
A word about Kelly Burley:  I've found that Kelly color-cures easily and rapidly.  This trait (common to most white-stem burleys) is deceptive, in that it still requires considerable aging before developing its rich, mellow taste.  Because of its lovely color-cured appearance, it appears smokable after hanging for a couple of months.  But at that point, it tends to be quite harsh, and burns poorly, producing a black ash.  Even after a month of subsequent kilning, it needs an additional month or two of rest before it approaches its "final" taste.  I think this is due to a high level of albuminous proteins remaining in the leaf.  (Darker varieties tend to breakdown their protein in synchrony with color-curing.)
Kelly Burley lugs, once fully aged, make beautiful, creamy light tan cigar wrappers, though they will have more punch than a similarly colored Connecticut Shade wrapper.  A Kelly puro is a medium to full-bodied smoke, with an old-time American cigar flavor and aroma--in contrast to a Caribbean-style cigar.  Blending the Kelly filler with Little Dutch and/or Pennsylvania Red makes a truly yummy cigar in just about any wrapper.  A Kelly binder beneath a Connecticut Broadleaf wrapper is a combination that I find particularly tasty.
Bob