Okay, I'm going to be the odd man (lass) out by going against the current of this being a bad recipe.
I say this because the fatty acid profile is very close to one of my main keeper recipes (my hubby's favorite showering bar, for what it's worth). My combination of oils/fats are different than yours, but the actual fatty acid profile is so close that I don't think it would make too much of a difference in performance.
For what it's worth, I use 10.5% castor in mine, although I used as much as 13% in it when I was still in the beginning fiddling stages with it. The cool thing I find with castor is that you can go way over 10% if you have enough hard oils to balance it out. For example, I have another formula that uses 23% castor, which is balanced out nicely by 65% tallow, and it's a great soap for me.
Anyway, I soap on the warm side with mine (between 110F - 120F......both lye and fats
at least 110F, although they don't need to be matching), and I use much less water than you seemed to use in yours (if I read you correctly about using 44% water to oils, that is), and I have absolutely no problem with it tracing too fast on me......unless my FO is an ornery one, that is. As long as I'm working with a well-behaved FO, I have plenty of time to swirl just fine.....but I'm very judicious with the stick-blender...... just a few short 2 to 3 second blasts here and there if needed, while hand-stirring the rest of the time.
I agree with Zing in that pudding trace is perfectly fine unless you want to do some of the more advanced swirling techniques that need a thinner trace. I say that as one who always pours at med-thick trace as a given, and I get nicely formed swirls, even if I do say so myself.
Example- the soap in my profile pic was poured at med-thick trace and my swirls came out nicely delicate looking nevertheless.
If you want your soap batter with your particular formula to remain thinner, hand-stir more/ stickblend less (or not a all), work with a well-behaved FO and add it up front to your oils.......and I would also normally instruct to increase your water amount, but if you truly used 44% water as per your oil amount, SoapCalc shows me that that makes for a 23% lye concentration (water to lye ratio) for your particular formula, which is a whole heck of a lot of water. I use a 33% lye concentration with mine, which with my particular formula equals 27.9% water as per oils. For what it's worth, I never use the water as % of oils button on SoapCalc. It produces too many inconsistent results in my soaps from formula to formula. I always use the Lye Concentration button instead for best results. Here's a really good thread that explains the difference between the two and why basing your water amount as a % of the lye instead of your oils is the better way to go:
http://www.soapmakingforum.com/showthread.php?t=53642
IrishLass