Your list looks good. To be honest you can go a long way with just just lights though. Most of the hurdle is in processing techniques, teasing out those finer structures....just when you think your picture is looking good you see a tutorial that lets you take your image to a whole new level.
I've been doing photography for 20+yrs and when I got into digital I started taking lots of pics of the night sky just to muck about. So I only have lights for those times but I can still get some nice shots with what I know now about processing.
Also when it comes to flats/darks/bias I keep a well labelled set of master flats/darks/bias frames. Some of the characteristics these frames are meant to remove don't change much or at all over time with the same equipment. I've had success with improving old shots I only had lights for using the same gear/settings to put together a master dark/flat/bias. There are some differences of course which technically add noise but the improvements I still get outway the added negatives.
So I'd suggest as you go to keep a well labelled set of master dark/bias/flat frames for different combinations of lenses and settings. There will be times when the weather comes in and ruins a photoshoot before you can take darks etc but at least building up a set of masters gives you something you can fall back on if you need. Many people might just say to throw away the data and reshoot another night, but there are times when it can't be done that easily (comets/eclipses/holiday location). For me, having some data is better than no data.