Bath Bombs & Glycerin Luffa Bars Are Here!

[print-me do_not_print=”.emoji”]Beautiful Bath Bombs & Glycerin Luffa soaps are here and ready for Holiday and special occasion Gift Giving…
Oh, and let’s definitely not forget…

“Self Indulgence and Gratification”

Our bombing run commander Brad (Palaka in Hawaiian) [and in real life his cockpit call sign [nickname] is “Wingnut” or Captain Wingnut], has worked hard this summer and fall in his Bomb laboratory re-formulating all of our Bath Bomb recipes from just blahhh one color spheres to WONDERFUL, ELEGANT,  FIZZING, FUN, WATER CONDITIONING, WATER COLORING, GORGEOUS SMELLING, and aesthetically BEAUTIFUL bath bombs… AND soon they’ll ALSO become FOAMING, FROTHING and BUBBLING bathing beauties too! (and HOORAY! Even though the additional ingredients will make the cost of our bath bombs more for us, for YOU our valued customers, we’ll probably be keeping their current pricing).
You’ll love them as they are and you’ll love them as they get even better.

The Best Part is These Beautiful, Elegant, Wonderful bath bombs are Finally HERE and Waiting for YOU!
We’ve had them with us for a while as we attended trade shows and holiday fairs but now they’re available to you on our site.

Click HERE to see ALL of our Bath Bombs!

Get it, use it, share it.

Put them in your tub and watch them bubble and froth and foam, and relax in the beautifully conditioned waters that are steeped in heavenly island aromas -OR- Put them in your closet and delicate’s drawers to add that fresh island flower scent to your room, closet and under clothing.

Either way you’re in for a wonderful treat.

BOMB SHELTER PREPARATIONS:
1. Put a sign on the bathroom door:
DO NOT DISTURB Life Saving Bombing Run in Progress.
2. Lock the bathroom door behind you.
3. Draw and nice warm/hot bath.
4. Light candles and dim the lights.
5. Put on your favorite bombing run music.
6. KGS Bombs (and Stress) AWAY!
ENJOY 

About Our Products

[print-me do_not_print=”.emoji”]About Kauai Girl Soap Products

Our handmade soaps are made by saponifying pure edible vegetable and nut oils into surfactants (cleaning bubbly molecules) and glycerin using lye as a catalyst.

While Lye is used in the process, the finished product has no lye in it. Chemically, there is no lye in our cured soap… at all. This is why.,,,
The chemical reaction between the lye and the oils alters both. 100% of the lye is used up turning the pure vegetable and nut oils into surfactants
(soap molecules) and glycerin. Our recipes also leave about 6-7% of skin conditioning oils unconverted leaving you more high quality skin conditioners in your bar of soap.

Our Hawaiian Couture soaps are Very High in Glycerin which is a natural humectant. Basically a molecule that attracts moisture, and leaves it behind, in this case on your skin. So our handmade soap with its natural humectant is additionally beneficial to your skin.

Commercial soap makers remove the glycerin from their soap for additional profit and to make harder bars but less glycerin makes their soap very drying and harsh. To get the maximum glycerin per batch they also convert all of the skin conditioning oils and leave nothing for you.

 Our handcrafted products are natural and contain no harsh or drying commercial chemicals that can be harmful to your skin, your children, your plumbing or mother earth.

Our Hawaiian Couture product colors come from natural herbs and spices and/or edible food coloring. Many of our natural handcrafted soap colors come from the earth, natural clays, minerals and botanical powders which makes our soaps very natural and very easy on your, your family and the environment as you rinse them down the drain.

Our unique scents come from combinations of pure and natural ingredients including essential oils, herbs & spices, which are additionally beneficial to your skin, as well as the purest fragrance oils available.

Our bath and body products are 100% handmade using traditional proprietary family recipes, with the addition of more beneficial skin ingredients such as natural glycerin humectants, essential oils, clays and minerals, which allow us to make them as beautiful as a Hawaiian Sunset for your pleasure.

 Our handmade soaps are crafted with love and care and we guarantee them 100%.

If you’re not happy with any of our products we will replace them or give you your money back.


Our handcrafted products are an affordable little luxury that are easy on your wallet, naturally wonderful for your skin, dreamy to your nose, and as you rinse them off, easy on Mother Earth.  

Koke’e State Park

[print-me do_not_print=”.emoji”]NOTE: If you don’t understand some of my words, please read our post: How to Speak Hawaiian which will tell you what many of my words mean! Mahalo.

KOKE’E
Koke’e is an area on the top of Mt. Waialeale (which is the extinct volcano that made my home island Kaua’i). From Kekaha (my home town) you take Koke’e Road and drive about 45 minutes to the top.
No matter what’s happening down below, the weather changes quickly up here so be prepared and take a jacket as it is usually misty and cool and can even get cold (remember, you’re on the top of volcano where it rains about an inch a day, every day of the year).
Along the scenic drive you’ll stop by lookout areas and look down with birds eye views into Waimea Canyon (the grand canyon of the pacific, 10 miles long and 3,000 feet deep). You may also see wild Liliko’i vines (passionfruit) and the Mokihana bush with very fragrant but bitter green berries which we use to make Lei’s. It is very popular to put in a Lei but it is very hard to find in the jungle so watch carefully.

If you’re very lucky you may even see a very reclusive Hawaiian bird, the Hawaiian pheasant. They sneak around in the jungle and sometimes you’ll see them run across the road or perhaps standing on the side of the road eating seeds and bugs.

At the top you’ll arrive at a the visitors center and park which is a beautiful place with a large meadow big enough for a couple of football games played simultaneously. There is a lodge/visitor center/natural history museum and plenty of room for the biggest gathering. Of course there are island chickens everywhere.

You might even see Nēnē (small Hawaiian geese that look similar to miniature Canada geese) flying by or wandering around in the meadow and park.

If you’re there in October, don’t miss the Hawaiian celebration for Queen Emma of Hawaii.

The park is used for recreation, camping, hiking and hunting.

THE KALALAU VALLEY LOOKOUT
From the visitors center, take the 5 minute drive to the top where you’ll arrive at the Kalalau valley lookout. Here you can look over the Nā Pali Coast which is a huge mountain range on the northwest side of the island. Many movies like Pirates of the Caribbean and Water World were filmed here.

HIKING IN THE PARK
There are SEVEN major hiking trails in Koke’e State Park.
Along these trails you’ll see spectacular views of the ocean, Waimea Canyon, lush jungle forest, and you see the most beautiful flowers, flowering trees and bushes and all of the unbelievably colorful Hawaiian birds.

You may even see wild boar rooting around and tearing up the jungle but WARNING. They are ferocious and can hurt you, even kill you. They are usually afraid of people because the men on my island hunt them, but if you see on, keep your eyes on it and back away. When I was young my uncles would go hunting pigs and goats up there (yes there are wild goats all over the mountains there too) and come home with some very big and mean looking boars. Then my tutu and us girls would prepare them and the men would put them in the imu and later we’d have kalua pork… and they weren’t so scary after that. YUM!

**Things to bring**
* Water (there is no water along the trails)
* Sunscreen (avoid the scorching sun if the day is clear)
* First-Aid (you never know what’s going to happen)
* A Jacket (keep warm if the day is misty or rainy)
* Hiking snacks (just in case)
* Appropriate Hiking Footwear (the trails can be murder on your feet)

TRAILS
* Alakai Swamp.
Since this area gets over 350 inches of rain per year, this is a huge swamp on the top of the volcano. When you hike it be sure to wear the appropriate clothing and take Bug Repellent because the mosquitoes know exactly where you are.

* Awaʻawapuhi Trail
(3.1 miles long One-Way, you gotta hike back so its 6.2 miles total)
This is a beautiful trail through the forest across the top of the mountain. There are occasional vista points where you can look down at the ocean. It is an easy hike for the first part because it’s all downhill, which makes the Pau Hana part even harder because it’s all up hill to go home. This trail connects to the Nu’alolo trail about 3 miles down but beware. If you take this trail your total hike will be about 9 miles long with only what you carry so this is not a novice day hike, you’d better be in shape. There is no water or facilities along this path.

* Kawaikoi Stream Trail
(about 1 3/4 miles long)
The State of Hawai’i says this is the most scenic mountain stream side trail in Hawai’i.
Since it is only 1 3/4 miles long, it is a relatively easy day hike. The stream and jungle are breath taking and the birds and flowers are gorgeous.
It is upstream from “Sugi Grove” and the trail starts about 3/4 of a mile past the Forest Reserve entrance sign on the Mohihi-Camp 10 Road. There are no facilities on this trail.

* Nuʻalolo Cliffs Trail
(a little more than 2 miles long)
This trail is sometimes closed due to dangerous conditions.
About 3 miles down the Awaʻawapuhi Trail you’ll find the entrance to this trail and it meets the main Nuʻalolo Trail between the 3 mile and 3 1/4 mile markers. This trail follows the upper rim of the dangerously steep Nuʻalolo Valley and lets you make a “loop” from the head of Awa’awapuhi Trail back to Koke’e State Park Headquarters.

* Nuʻalolo Trail
(3.8 miles One-Way, so hiking back makes it just under 9 miles)
The trail starts near the Kokee State Park Headquarters and goes through the Ku’ia Natural Area Reserve before reaching the forest reserve. The trail climbs up to 2,234 ft. elevation and ends at a U.S.G.S. survey marker titled “Lolo No. 2”. This trail is an used as an alternate route to the cross over of the Nuʻalolo Cliff Trail to Awa’awapuhi Trail and heavily used by hunters. The end of this trail can be very DANGEROUS so stay inside the safety railings. The steep drop over the cliff to the valley below is about 2,000.

* Pihea Trail
(3.8 miles One-Way so it’s just under 9 miles round trip)
You start this trail at the Puu O Kila Lookout which is at the end of Highway 550. This is a recommended forest reserve trail for scenic views. You’ll see Kauai’s native forest birds and a brief sampling the Alaka’i Wilderness’ terrain and vegetation. This trail is used as an alternate route to the Alaka’i Swamp Trail, which intersects the Pihea Trail just before 1 3/4 mile point. There is a short spur that ends at the Pihea Overlook, the highest point on the rim of Kalalau Valley. Be CAREFUL here. This borders the Alaka’i swamp and wilderness, it is often rainy and muddy. Camping here is by permit only.

* Poomau Canyon Lookout Trail
(.3 miles long)
This short trail starts 1.5 mile beyond the Forest Reserve entrance sign on the Mohihi-Camp 10 Road and leads to a overlook viewing area of Poomau and Waimea Canyons.
It can be closed for dangerous conditions or when maintenance crews are working.

What is French Milled or Triple Milled Soap?

[print-me do_not_print=”.emoji”]French milled soap sometimes called triple milled or French triple milled soap has been around for three plus centuries. It was invented by French soap makers back in the early 1700’s. It was designed to recover or rebatch soaps that had seized, failed, weren’t quite right, etc. The process was so effective that it became a standard practice.

Okay, what does triple milled mean?
French triple milled soap uses the same age old cold processed soap that we all make but it is refined at least three more times, more than just letting it air cure for 6 weeks.

Since it’s already soap that just needs curing, why and how is it refined further?

The Process,
While French milled soap starts out as conventional cold process soap that is allowed to firm up and start curing or even go the entire 6 week curing time it is far from finished.

After allowing it to cure for at least 24 hours and up to months, it is then ground, grated or broken up. It is placed in a cooking pot with additional liquid added to help liquefy the soap. It then heated and cooked and brought to a boil until it all becomes a liquid again.

The liquid which now resembles oatmeal is removed from the heat and allowed to begin to cool. As it cools it is either hand worked like taffy or bread dough or on a larger scale it is passed through a machine with 3 high pressure rollers called a “three roll mill” or “triple roll mill”. The mill kneads, mixes, refines, disperses and homogenizes the soap.
The phrase “triple milled” comes from the process of passing the soap through three high pressure rollers but it can be more than triple if the product is passed through a second or third time. In the case of hand milling, it is hand cooked, mixed, kneaded, and homogenized to the best equivalent that can be done by hand.
This process of re-heating and kneading refines the soap and makes is more luxurious and since it is heat cured it is better than standard cold air cured cold process soap.

During the processing (usually at the end of the processing), the fragrance and other additives are put in just before the last milling or kneading but making designs, swirls and beautiful color mixes is almost impossible as the mixture is very thick and uncompromising. 

After it is mixed and kneaded, or roller milled, it is poured, or packed by hand or pressure packed by machines into molds. Hand kneading and packing is difficult as the soap is still very hot and working with it by hand can be dangerous, painful and stressful. Most French milled soaps are done with the aid of the milling machine, but it can, and is still done by hand. We do it on a very limited basis!!!

The soap (in molds) is then allowed to cool for 4 to 24 hours and then expelled from the molds. If it was poured into loaf molds, it is immediately cut into bars while it is still soft. It is then allowed to cure in the open air for another 24 hours after which it is packaged for sale.

Once French Milled soap has cooled to room temperature it is ready to be used as soap. All of the chemical reactions and saponification was done by the process of heat, stirring, kneading and mixing.

Benefits of French Milled Soap
The soap is mixed together better.
The soap has fewer impurities.
The soap creates more lather, is creamier and more luxurious.
The soap is more pure and smoother.
The soap is more consistent in color, texture and fragrance.
The soap is denser (not harder) and will last longer.

When we make our French Hand Milled soap, it is done with great safety, care and physical effort but the end product is really a pleasure to use.