Prepped and carpeted the floor panels today. That meant grinding off any little epoxy bumps, rough sanding the shine off the panels, and re-drilling any holes that go through the deck. All the through-holes are coated with epoxy so that the screws holes don't let water into the wood. I also had to clean my whole shop before unwrapping the carpet. My shop floor was big enough to lay out the carpet and lay out the panels on it, to be sure I have the grain of the carpet oriented north-south on each piece.
The indoor-outdoor carpet glue I used is water-based, which means that it isn't really cured until all the water evaporates out of it (wisdom from tiny boat nation). I began each panel by stapling the under side of a north-south edge, then flipping the carpet out of my way and spreading the glue. On the larger panels I worked them one at a time, which meant taking a 30 minute break to clean the tools while the glue tacked up. Then I rolled the carpet over the glue, made sure it stretched tight around the stapled edge, rolled it away from the stapled edge with a 8" length of 2" PVC pipe. Then I flipped it over and stapled the other north-south edge so, in theory I have the carpet stretched out east-west between two stapled edges. I then did a little more rolling before letting the panel sit.
So for tonight all my panels are laying flat with a fan blowing across them, just like drying out the carpet after a plumbing adventure. I think I'll leave them like that for a few days. But tomorrow I will begin upholstering the corners.
Oh, while I was at it, I reinforced the deck and drilled holes for an alternative mounting location for the forward pedestal seat. So if she wants to move the seat further aft behind the hatch openings, it's just a matter of punching bolts through the carpet and bolting the pedestal down in its alternative location.