Mississippi is pretty humid, so I'm thinking that's a result of the silicone, the humidity and probably other factors that your full recipe will help ID.
Possible other contributing factors: the amount of SL you added. Salt draws water to itself, so with SL your soap could be drawing ambient water from the humid environment.
I'm not sure about the lavender at that amount, as I always weight my fragrances, rather than using teaspoonsful.
I am guessing from your photos you made a huge batch of soap using 110 ounces of oil? If I plug that in as ounces, (which I don't use anymore - I use grams now), that's a pretty large batch of soap (almost 5,000 grams). You have so many molds full it's got to be close to that, I think. For a beginner, I would suggest starting smaller (500 grams of oil) until you are sure your recipes and technique and process are giving you consistently reliable results. Then you won't have to worry quite as much when something goes wrong, and there's a lot less chance of wasted materials.
But if you used 110 ounces of oil, then your lye solution shouldn't be 111 ounces, but rather about 56 ounces if you used the default settings in your
lye calculator (which ever one you used.)
In Soapee, when I plug in 110 ounces of OO and leave everything else unchanged this is what the recipe looks like:
So either I assume incorrectly about what you did, or you made an error with your lye solution. 14.15 oz NaOH plus 41.8 oz water = 58.95 oz lye solution. Or did you accidentally use the grams number for water?
In any case, how much water and how much lye specifically is really important.