Kayak angler’s epic battle with giant marlin immortalized

Scott Mutchler pulled off a rare feat in May when he landed a 600-pound black marlin from a kayak while fishing in Panama.

Scott Mutchler pulled off a rare feat in May when he landed a 600-pound black marlin from a kayak while fishing in Panama.

A photo of the massive billfish leaping just beyond his bow was widely circulated and brought Mutchler notoriety in fishing circles.

Now the resident of Jupiter, Fla., has both the photo and a vivid painting of that epic moment to help immortalize the catch.

Scott Mutchler battles 600-pound black marlin. Photo: Adam Fisk/Los Buzos Fishing Resort

“I’m honored to have the painting legend Carey Chen paint this for me,” he wrote Friday on Facebook. “He’s as nice as he seems on videos.”

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Chen, a marine artist known for his creative use of colors, also posted about meeting with Mutchler:

“Met with the kayak legend that has the most viral fishing photo on the internet Scott Mutchler, who commissioned me to do the painting of his 600 lb black marlin he released on the kayak [at] Los Buzos Panama. Such an incredible feat not only to release a 600 lb black marlin but from a kayak this takes extraordinary skills.”

Scot Mutchler (left) poses with renowned artist Carey Chen

After the May 23 catch, out of Los Buzos Fishing Resort, Mutchler told FTW Outdoors,  “Once I was hooked it was nothing like I ever could have dreamed about. I was in for the fight of my life.”

Mutchler became the first Los Buzos client to catch and release a black marlin from a kayak. Adam Fisk, a Los Buzos guide, had previously released two marlin estimated to weigh 500-plus pounds from his kayak.

Mutchler’s 45-minute fight, during which he was towed one mile against a strong current, was captured by Fisk on video.

Canada quickly schedules Panama to replace cancelled Iran friendly

Canada Soccer acted quickly to find an opponent for June 5

Canada Soccer has announced that its men’s national team will face Panama on Sunday at BC Place in Vancouver, replacing a cancelled friendly against Iran that was scheduled for the same date.

Amid opposition that included prime minister Justin Trudeau, Canada Soccer pulled the plug on the match against Iran last week.

Iran’s military shot down a plane in 2020 in an incident that killed dozens of Canadians, prompting an outcry over Canada Soccer’s decision to schedule a match against the Middle Eastern nation.

In a statement last week, Canada Soccer admitted some fault in its decision to schedule the match.

“Over the past week, the untenable geopolitical situation of hosting Iran became significantly divisive, and in response, the match was cancelled,” the statement read. “While we considered the external factors in selecting the optimal opponent in our original decision-making process, we will strive to do better moving forward.”

Just days after cancelling the match, the federation was able to secure a new opponent for the same date and location as the game against Iran.

As a gesture of goodwill, Canada Soccer is offering fans discounted ticket prices for the hastily scheduled match against the team’s CONCACAF rival.

“All tickets in the lower bowl for the Canada v Panama match will be priced at $30 to thank Canadian fans for their support in light of the recently cancelled international match and to provide an opportunity to celebrate Canada Soccer’s Men’s National Team’s qualification for Qatar 2022,” a federation statement read.

The game against Panama will be the first home match for Canada since it qualified for its first World Cup since 1986. Panama, meanwhile, narrowly missed out on an intercontinental playoff spot, finishing fifth out of eight teams in CONCACAF qualifying.

Following the match against Panama, Canada will have two Nations League matches: against Curacao on June 9 and at Honduras on June 13.

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Video shows whale breaching just feet from worried angler

For a group of kayak anglers off Panama recently, fishing became secondary as two humpback whales surfaced nearby and began to throw their weight around.

For a group of kayak anglers off Panama recently, fishing became secondary as humpback whales surfaced and began to throw their weight around.

While the astonishingly close encounter left them in awe, the angler closest to the activity told FTW Outdoors that he feared one of the 40-ton whales might land on him.

“It made me realize how small we are as people,” Byron Young said, adding that the breaching whale in the footage was only 25 feet away. “When they hit the water I could feel a rumble through my kayak into my body.”

The footage – a silent Facebook clip and a longer YouTube version in which the whales appear at 17:03 – was captured by Robert Field of Field Trips with Robert Field.

The encounter occurred in September but Field only recently published the footage as part of the YouTube episode.

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The kayak anglers were guests at Los Buzos Resort, which is popular among fishermen and surfers.

Young, who is from Riverside, Ca., is said to be enjoying “a front-row seat” as the whales revealed their tail flukes and slapped at the surface with their pectoral fins.

But Young said he was peddling backwards even before one of the whales breached because he wasn’t sure the whales were aware of his presence.

“I was trying to get away from them because I thought one was going to land on me and I kept telling myself this is really going to hurt,” he recalled.

Young added that the fishing was equally “amazing” and sent FTW Outdoors the above image showing him posing with a large roosterfish that he caught and released.

Watch: Brianna Martinez Reads ‘Ten Little Ladybugs’

Some of you with small children might be looking for a new bedtime story for them.

Some of you with small children might be looking for a new bedtime story for them. Enter Notre Dame women’s soccer defender Brianna Martinez. The junior from Albuquerque, New Mexico, was featured on Notre Dame’s Twitter account Sunday. Specifically, she read “Ten Little Ladybugs”, written by Melanie Gerth and illustrated by Laura Huliska-Beith:

It’s been an exciting year for Martinez. She was selected for the 2020 U-20 U.S. Women’s National Team for the CONCACAF Championship. The team clinched a spot in the U-20 Women’s World Cup. That tournament was to have taken place in Costa Rica and Panama this month, but COVID-19 pushed it to January, and it now will happen in Costa Rica only.

With her and her teammates’ season postponed, Martinez is devoting her time to other things. Clearly, this includes reading to children in what is considered the safest possible fashion at this time:  virtually. Hopefully, other Notre Dame fall sports athletes can do something similar until they can compete again.

Central American secret: Panama emerges as dynamic vacation destination

PANAMA CITY – “This place is nonstop,” Oliver Riding said, pointing to the seat of our golf cart where his phone beeped and chirped constantly during our round at Santa Maria Hotel and Golf Resort. “Listen to this thing. I know what each (beep) …

PANAMA CITY – “This place is nonstop,” Oliver Riding said, pointing to the seat of our golf cart where his phone beeped and chirped constantly during our round at Santa Maria Hotel and Golf Resort. “Listen to this thing. I know what each (beep) means, so I know the important ones.” 

There were a lot of important ones that morning, including an email from a group interested in bringing a major international tournament to this resort on the bustling east side of Panama City. Riding, the resort’s golf general manager, multitasked effortlessly, firing off texts and emails, returning calls and entertaining visiting writers while still managing to play a tidy round on the Santa Maria layout, a product of Jack Nicklaus’ design shop. 

Santa Maria is a microcosm of Panama, which is buzzing with activity and optimism. 

Panama’s economy has been one of the world’s strongest in recent years, and that is reflected in our surroundings. A decade ago the neighboring Costa del Este suburb was little more than scattered warehouses, mangrove and jungle. Troy Vincent, who oversaw design and construction of Santa Maria and its sister course, Buenaventura, said when he first arrived onsite at Santa Maria, the landscape reminded him of TPC Sawgrass before Pete Dye recreated it with bulldozers and an unlimited budget. 

“It was entirely in wetlands area,” Vincent said. “That entire site was built up many, many meters.” 

The course at Santa Maria Hotel & Golf Resort (courtesy of Santa Maria)

Now, soaring condo towers, retail destinations and office buildings line broad boulevards in a master-planned community along the Pacific. As Riding gave me a tour of this pop-up city – passing the regional headquarters for leading consumer brands such as Nestle, Samsung and Adidas – he compared it to a mini-Dubai. It creates a stunning backdrop around the urban oasis that is Santa Maria.

“When my daughters came here, they said, ‘Dad, this is like playing golf in Central Park,’” Riding recalled as we studied the sleek condominium towers and corporate offices that frame the approach to the par-5 10th. 

More than a canal

Ask anyone who has never visited Panama to tell you what they know about the country, and most likely the first thing they’ll mention is the Panama Canal, the 50-mile waterway that connects the Caribbean Sea to the Pacific Ocean. The canal might be the only thing that person knows about Panama, other than some hazy memory of the spirited 1970s debate that preceded the decision to transfer control of the waterway from the U.S. to Panama, or the 1989 U.S. invasion that led to the removal of Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega. 

The Panama Canal (courtesy of VisitPanama.com)

The canal was a technological marvel when it opened in 1914, and it remains so. It is mesmerizing to watch massive container ships gradually levitated, like some sort of magic trick, as they pass through the locks, allowing them to navigate Gatun Lake, 85 feet above sea level, on their way from the Gulf of Panama to the Caribbean Sea. 

Panama has become an isthmus of stability in a turbulent region. Thanks in large part to the canal, including a recent expansion to accommodate the passage of even larger container ships, Panama has one of the world’s fastest-growing economies. The World Bank reported that Panama’s average annual growth rate over the past five years is 5.6 percent. 

For adventurous Americans, Panama ticks off a lot of boxes. Panama’s currency is the dollar, which lends stability to the growing economy and heightens the country’s appeal to U.S. tourists. Panama is easy to reach, with direct flights from many major U.S. airports to Panama City. Visitors arriving from the southeastern United States, or even the northeast, could pick up their bags at Tocumen International Airport, be on the first tee at Santa Maria in less than an hour, play 18 holes and, if they’re feeling ambitious, still have time to catch a $12 Uber into Panama City for dinner. 

El Faro Beach Club pool at Buenaventura (courtesy of Buenaventura Golf & Beach Resort)

Panama also presents visitors with options. While Panama City’s nearly 2 million residents live in and among sleek high-rises that line the Gulf, one of the most popular nighttime destinations is Panama City’s “old town,” Casco Viejo, whose streets are lined with bustling restaurants, bars and boutique hotels.

The Santa Maria and Buenaventura resorts are managed by Marriott, and Troon Golf oversees the golf operations, so guests unfamiliar with Panama will arrive safe in the knowledge they’ll be well-cared-for during their stays. It’s just a question of what they desire from their Panamanian experience. Are you interested in golf, creature comforts and cultural immersion in a dynamic city that this year celebrated its 500th anniversary? Or would you prefer a remote, laid-back, beachside escape? Given the proximity of Santa Maria and Buenaventura, there’s no reason you can’t have both. 

Two styles at play

Vincent initially began working on Santa Maria and Buenaventura a decade ago while serving as a senior design associate for Nicklaus Design. By the time construction began, Vincent had hung out his own shingle, but the Nicklaus team asked him to shepherd the courses to completion.

The Buenaventura Golf & Beach Resort course (courtesy of Buenaventura Golf & Beach Resort)

While Santa Maria, much like Sawgrass, was entirely manufactured, Buenaventura “is a much more natural setting,” Vincent said. Much of the infrastructure already was in place when Vincent began working on Buenaventura in 2009. The residential component and water features already were built, and the existing horse stables were neatly transformed into a stylish clubhouse that wraps around a small plaza in an indoor-outdoor architectural motif popular throughout Latin America. 

With everything in place, Vincent didn’t try to overthink the Buenaventura design. His goal was to create a fun resort course that would lay lightly on the land, as if it had been built decades earlier. That goal was reinforced by the ancient and massive corotú trees that help define the resort’s landscape, most notably two that frame the approach on the 16th hole.

“My goal was to make Buenaventura feel like an older golf course than Santa Maria,” Vincent said. “The landforms are very simple, the greens are simpler, and with the waste areas by the tees, we were trying to eliminate forced carries because it’s a resort course. It seems to fit naturally on the site. That’s what I was going for.”

That’s evident from the start. Alfonso Castiñeira, the director of golf, took a moment on the third tee to urge our group to savor the graceful manner in which the dogleg-left third and par-5 fourth flow along the northeastern edge of the routing. Only about 100 yards from the fourth green, work is nearing completion on a new marina providing access to the Pacific Ocean.

The front nine closes with a clever risk-reward par 5 that makes good use of the pond that frames the right side of the hole and front of the green. 

Santa Maria Golf Course (courtesy of Santa Maria Golf Course)

At Santa Maria, Vincent created a course that is very different from Buenaventura, yet probably more in keeping with the Nicklaus brand. 

“Santa Maria is a more challenging golf course because we have a lot more contours in the greens,” Vincent said. “It’s more of a second-shot golf course. I wanted to bring the short game back. I think that’s something we’ve lost in the game of golf. A lot of the contours are built, and you might be faced with chipping off of a fairway cut versus rough. So it’s a more challenging golf course.”

Riding had told me as much beforehand, and it didn’t take long to see what he meant.

“There’s a lot happening on that green,” I said to him as we walked off No. 1. 

The vibrancy of Panama City was underscored as we took the tunnel under the busy Pan American Highway to the par-5 second, which runs parallel to the highway. 

On the short par-3 fifth, Riding took a moment to orient our group to the surrounding skyline. “Look at Google Earth. There was nothing here in 2010,” he said.

The short, dogleg-right sixth is the classic local-knowledge hole – not that golfers are known for being fast learners. 

During a recent tournament, Riding said, “I put the tee here (on the white tee box) the final day and it had the highest scoring average of all four days because guys kept doing dumb stuff.” 

The par-4 ninth is the quintessential Nicklaus hole, with water lining the right side and a green that is far more welcoming to left-to-right approaches. There’s talk of flipping Santa Maria’s nines, which would create a more theatrical finish in front of the hotel. 

A deluxe room at Santa Maria (courtesy of The Santa Maria Hotel & Golf Resort)

The back nine brings players closer to the high-end real estate, along with some crafty design work. Riding, for example, calls the 14th – with a semi-Biarritz green, bunkers front left and a swale right – “one of the hardest par 3s I’ve ever played.” 

That reflects the quality of golf found at Santa Maria and Buenaventura, though Panama probably never will have the density of destination-quality golf found elsewhere in Latin America, such as the Dominican Republic or Mexico’s Los Cabos region. It offers a different, and in some ways richer, experience to travelers exploring the Caribbean region. 

I left Panama with the sense that the country is a fascinating Central American secret just waiting to be unraveled by adventurous tourists looking for something more fulfilling than 36 daily holes of trophy golf. In the post-Noriega era, Panama has in many ways emerged as a model for this beleaguered region – a largely peaceful, prosperous, dynamic country. Whether visitors want to lose themselves in Panama City, take a boat tour of the canal or simply hide away on a remote beach, they’ll find a country that has a rich history and a promising future.