I made some salt bars that were a bit crumbly when I cut them (
link). (I prefer not to cut, rather use individual molds, for this reason but I was traveling and had only limited supplies with me on my road trip.) I made the Salt Flats soap on Aug. 18, 2018 so it is still not yet a year old even now. I cut the soap while it was still warm, but longer than originally planned because I fell asleep. The crumbliness wasn't terribly bad, so I just wrapped each bar loosely in plain newsprint paper (no ink) and kept them wrapped for the remainder of my roadtrip and beyond. So they didn't actually get as much air circulation as my curing soaps usually do, but I didn't want salty crumbles all over my car, etc. so I just left if that way until I tested a bar this past March.
At 7 months (in March) when I tested the soap, it was not crumbly once I started using it for hand-washing. I let it dry out and it's been sitting in the open air since, and there is no evidence of crumbliness now either. But I still feel that it is too drying to my skin, although I do believe my skin recovered faster this time, probably due to the high summer humidity of July. I will continue waiting for longer cure to see if this changes for me and my skin. I prefer soap that leaves my skin feeling as well nourished and moisturized as before washing.
The recipe at the time (due to travel & ingredients on hand) was 82% CO, 18% HO Safflower, only 22% salt because that is all I had harvested from the Bonneville Salt Flats. I wanted to try self-harvested natural salt and that's all I had. Perhaps I will try again with a 1:1 salt to oils ratio in the future when I have another chance to harvest again and have the other necessary ingredients. In fact, I'd very much like to do this in future just to try it out to compare to other salt soaps I've made with the 1:1 salt to oils ratio.
Edit: I cut with a pastry cutter and not wire (I don't travel with a wire soap cutter usually anyway.)
Also there is a photo of the lather in March (at 7 months) at this link:
https://www.soapmakingforum.com/media/bonneville-salt-flats-soap-lather.2090/full