This photo is the yield from the Spring sucker crop of One Sucker. I only got about one pound from 30 plants. The leaves were very small, had lots of disease, flowered very early and just were not very vigorous. So, I'm not inclined to try it again with that variety. Just for the heck of it, I might try it with the Little Yellow though.
I can't comment much about a sucker crop, but I've grown three dark varieties here in the south. Madole, small stalk black mammoth, and staghorn (a dark Virginian according to northwood seeds). All three have been pretty disease resistant in my area. I've not been over impressed with the yield and growth of small stalk black mammoth, It's ok but not great. Madole does better for me and produces larger leaves with more uniform plant heights and less suckering.
Staghorn also does well but I have trouble thinking of it as a dark tobacco. Staghorn air cures a nice dark reddish brown color and is a lighter more pleasant smoke than madole. I can see staghorn fitting the bill for a wider variety of uses than Madole (i.e. Larger component in a pipe, cigar, cigarette blend). There is a night and day difference between Madole and staghorn, both good choices but two very different tobacco types. Madole comes across as a stronger flavor profile and more inline with what I think of as a dark tobacco - more of a bold prescence. Staghorn is great, but a little more mellow than what I would think of as a dark tobacco.
I've made chewing tobacco with all three varities and they all work well for that purpose. I'll be curious to hear your thoughts on little yellow.