I suppose it has been two weeks and no one has answered this because it is not done much. If you do mix, you need to dry for the thickest, most defect-prone wood, then start equalizing based on the fastest-to-dry wood. It's not an economical way to run a kiln. You mention that the wood is expensive - this is even more reason to not mix types.
Another factor to consider is that it will be difficult to load and baffle a kiln with many types of wood in it. The packs are usually different heights and they don't stack well.
So, people do mix types of wood. It's a matter of making your best guess from past experience about what will work together and where to put it in the kiln for best results.