Inbox is fixed.
As for the soap, it's simply wonderful. Mine isn't technically ready yet, but I've been using it anyways (I wonder if I'll ever play by the rules?). As of right now, it's very exfoliating. I LOVE a good scrub, but for some people, at this point, it might be too much. Anyways, according to most people who make it, it becomes much less abrasive with a proper cure (3 months, gasp!). Supposedly, with a full cure, it feels just like rubbing a polished river rock on yourself. It's VERY, VERY sudsy and super silky feeling. You must use a high coconut oil content (other oils don't suds well in salt/saltwater), so make sure you make up for it with a high superfat (saving money on lye if you want to look at it that way, lol). I've been cranking out the salt bars (they're actually pretty fun to make), so eventually I'll be able to send some samples out to people to try them out for themselves.
ETA: It's also supposed to be healing. A lot of people swear by salt bars for facial soap. I've been using it for a short while, and I truely believe it is helping to clear up my acne. I'd like to give it a go with shaving, since it's so silky feeling. I want to see if it burns like the dickens during or after shaving. Oh, and some may think it'd be very drying, but if you superfat your coconut oil at 18-20%, it combats the drying powers of the salt and makes it very nice. After the shower, it feels like any other bar of soap without goats milk. That squeaky clean, yet soft and not dried out feeling. The goats milk definately makes you feel fifty times more moisturized than water. I might make some salt bars with goats milk with regular sea salt (without the red specks of minerals), but wanted to keep this stark white so the minerals showed through better.