Sunday was a whole new set of issues. I went to CVS pharmacy to pick up some things and walked in the boat and asked Steve did he smell propane? He said no and i said check the bedroom, he immediately went outside and turned off the propane. Micheal (a sailor down the dock) came by and they started going over what would cause the leak to smell in the aft berth and how to find it. Steve got some soapy water and found the leak at a fitting by the tanks. Steve fixed the leak and then we discovered that the bilge was a little full so we started bailing out the bilge to a completely dry state to see how much water was coming in and from where. So let me put this simply the boat ended up looking like a salvage boat because we had the complete bed including mattresses pulled up and in salon with the complete salon floor on the deck outside. I got a bucket of water and cleaned every one of the hull openings. I still had stains under the floor from the ocean crossing pineapple juice incident! So we dried up every bilge area and also cleaned the water out from under the bed. We still have to fix the ladder leak. Needless to say Steve and I were filthy and damp and worked all day on this project. Boats are not all pleasure just like a car or a house work has to be done and boat maintenance is constant. Esp in sea/salt water. We received a text from Jim and Pam to come eat they had cooked us a southern meal! We were totally exhausted but could not say no. Especially when someone cooks a meal dedicated to the south. The meal was off the hook and it was so nice to sit at a well placed table. We thanked our hosts and proceeded to head back to the Thingamajig foe some well needed rest.