I bought my boat two years ago, and believe me it was a labor of love. The prior owner pulled the port side main chainplate right out of the bulkhead. It seems he had a prior leak at the mast base, and although he repaired that one, didn't look for any collateral damage. I had to cut the bulkhead out (dry rot) midway between the port hull and mast support, and replace it. I used 3/4" plywood, bonded to the hull and existing panel with epoxy and fiberglass mat. I doubled the remaining stays with 3/4" plywood and glassed (and Mat)them in as well.If you boat is like mine, the stanchion bases may need some work as well. One good way it to re-tighten them, and look for water oozing out the screw holes. Several of mine were mushy inside and I used a router to cut them right out, all the way to the interior layer of glass. I built the inside of the new hole up to the required height with plywood (same as before) filled the hole with epoxy, reshaped it to match the originals, then gel coated it, and redrilled the holes. I use SS Fender washers on the underside for added stability. Matching gel coat on a boat that old takes time and effort, but its a good old boat, and worth the time. As far as the screw holes go, for the ones that are not mushy, you can put some duck tape on the underside, mix some epoxy with filler, and push it in with a empty calking cartridge tube, West Marine has them. Good Luck and fair winds!