From: "Frank Kolhouse" <fkolhouse@netwurx.net> Save Address

To: <jjsmagic@bellsouth.net>
Subject: Re: mexico trip
Date: Wednesday, March 07, 2007 11:33:37 AM [View Source]

jj.
I have been bragging on your dip and dye so much since my visit to mexico.A
friend of mine who ice fishes almost every day is coming to get my last few
drops fo chartreuse I have left to try on hard water fishing(ice) for
northern and panfish this weekend. In the north, for perch, orange is a
popular color and for salmon red/orange is the best to match color of salmon
eggs(roe) and he fishes more than any other person I know. He knows every
bait dealer in these parts and most fishermen. He too will soon become a
advocate of jj dip and dye as I am sure it will work in cold water as well
as warm. I have asked him the same ,try it, take pictures and will be
sending more testimonials. Assuming the product works well for him as it did
for me the both of us want to become a dealer/distributor for you in this
part of the usa and will pursue the promotion of dip and dye. If you would
please send me a bottle of chartreuse, red, blue. and clear. I dont expect
you to send free so charge my credit card you have on file. I am already a
satisfied customer and hope to meet yall renecks sumday in mexico. looking
forward to doing buisness with you soon and post my testimonial and pictures
on your web page.I have entered some tournaments this year and will be using
on every cast jj's!!!!!
>> Subject: mexico trip

jj.
I have been bragging on your dip and dye so much since my visit to mexico.A
friend of mine who ice fishes almost every day is coming to get my last few
drops fo chartreuse I have left to try on hard water fishing(ice) for
northern and panfish this weekend. In the north, for perch, orange is a
popular color and for salmon red/orange is the best to match color of salmon
eggs(roe) and he fishes more than any other person I know. He knows every
bait dealer in these parts and most fishermen. He too will soon become a
advocate of jj dip and dye as I am sure it will work in cold water as well
as warm. I have asked him the same ,try it, take pictures and will be
sending more testimonials. Assuming the product works well for him as it did
for me the both of us want to become a dealer/distributor for you in this
part of the usa and will pursue the promotion of dip and dye. If you would
please send me a bottle of chartreuse, red, blue. and clear. I dont expect
you to send free so charge my credit card you have on file. I am already a
satisfied customer and hope to meet yall renecks sumday in mexico. looking
forward to doing buisness with you soon and post my testimonial and pictures
on your web page.I have entered some tournaments this year and will be using
on every cast jj's!!!!!

frank kolhouse
Subject: Re: mexico trip

>> wow what a product !!!!! On a recent trip to lake guerrero, Mexico I
>> took 3 bottles of your dip and dye.
>> I caught 3 times the fish as my counterparts until they started using
>> your dip and dye, even the lodge owner and guides wanted your fish
>> attractors.I had to promise to send your product to them in mexico or
>> they wasn't going to take us back to the airport! Every fish we caught on
>> plastics(98%) had your attractant on it. picture to follow. thanks again
>>
>> Frank Kolhouse
we have been trying to get the 13 plus pound monster from mexico  pic downloaded but havent been sucessful,,please bear with us.

If anyone would like to see franks pig just write me at jjsmagic@bellsouth.net

 

 

WAYNE, CAUGHT THIS NICE BASS ON LAKE VARNER, NEWTON COUNTY GA EARLIER THIS YEAR ON AN OL-NELLE BLACK & BLUE JIG

WITH GREEN PUMPKIN CHUNK THAT WAS DIPPED IN "JJSMAGIC " CHATREUSE DIPPIN DYE.

THIS ONE WEIGHED 7 LBS 4 OZ.

CONGRATS TO WAYNE.

JJ

                            

Waynes  4 fish from AUGUST 2007 in Barnesville, Ga  using Ol-Nelle Jig dipped in JJ,s Magic Dip

congrats again


From:  Nicky La Bonte <nickypaisan@yahoo.com> Add to Address Book
Date:  2005/07/24 Sun AM 01:27:16 EDT
To:  info@jjsmagic.com
Subject:  please read

To whom it may concern,      I have first seen jjs magic on the internet so it sounded interesting. i ordered the blue and chartreuse bottles and first cast i caught my first large mouth bass 24" 7lb 14oz. had very good luck since then. i have never caught so much in a day before jjs magic. i wanna thank you. nicholas labonte

__________________________________________________

7-20-05 a.jpg

From:  "McDowell, Doug" <dmcdowell@hcbe.net> Add to Address Book
Date:  2005/06/07 Tue PM 03:13:10 EDT
To:  <info@jjsmagic.com>
Subject:  A great product

JJ, Just wanted to let you know how much our club likes JJ's Magic. It is the best attractant we have every used. We were fortunate to have you send a couple samples to try. We drew for it at a club meeting. The guys who got the samples loved it and said their catch ratio improved greatly. More than one person said the fish just hold on better if you are using it.   During the Intercity Tournament last weekend on lake Sinclair, I was using JJ's Magic on my bait. The person I drew out with was not. I out fished him 4 to 1. Finally I convinced him to try it and he immediately started catching fish.   We have ordered from you several times, and at the Top 6 this year, we all stocked up while at west point. JJ, we just wanted to say what a great product you have, and thanks for giving us a chance to sample it the first time. Attached is a fish I caught on lake Sinclair using JJ’s Magic.   Doug McDowell
President, Middle Georgia Bass Club
Communications Director, Georgia Bass Federation
(478) 447-0504

 

 


dougs9lbscompressed.jpg

 
 
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Jackson
Team Cleary Warms Up On Jackson’s Summer Bass
Ben Cleary is only 16, but he’s getting a lot of fishing practice right out his back door.
 
By Brad Gill
Originally published in the July 2006 issue of GON
 
Ben’s 5 1/2-lb. Jackson largemouth nailed a Texas-rigged Mag II worm deep in brush. After an awesome fight at the boat, Benjie was able to scoop her up for pictures.
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HD Marine tournament anglers beware... there’s a young ball of fire  headed your way for the 2007 tournament season. His name is Ben Cleary. He’s 16 years old, and during his summer vacation he has been warming up his bass-fishing skills on Lake Jackson, where he lives.

Besides living on a lake where he can practice, Ben has an advantage that many kids his age don’t have, a heck of a coach — his dad, Benjie.

Right now Benjie Cleary and a fellow named Randy Thompson are in fifth place in GON’s Team Power Rankings list (as of June 21) where they’ve earned points fishing the Berry’s tournament trail on Sinclair and Oconee.

“We’ve really had a great year,” said Benjie. “We’ve won $7,000 since November.”

Benjie has been fishing Jackson for 25 years and is one of the very best tournament anglers on the 4,750-acre, Georgia Power lake.

I met Benjie and Ben at Lake Jackson on a sultry afternoon in early June. When Ben introduced himself to me he came across as a polite, conservative young man, a promising trait for someone looking to play the tournament game.

Maybe this up-and-coming tournament angler could help us with a fish or two for photos, I thought.

“I gave him my old Ranger, so he even goes by himself sometimes,” said Benjie. “He’s a good fisherman.”

Good — word around the lake was the fishing had been pretty tough. It took somewhere in the neighborhood of five pounds to get a check at a recent Berry’s pot tournament.

We rolled out of the South River headed down the lake and stopped on the first rocky point on the right. There are rocks all over this thing, making it a magnet for summer bass. To better find it, there’s a screened-in boat house off the right-hand side of the point.

Focusing on main-lake, rocky points near deep water is pretty much one of Benjie’s staples for putting spotted bass in the boat from July through September at Jackson.

“The spots here have taken over pretty good, and they’ve gotten better, too,” said Benjie. “I caught several 3-lb. spots last year. Three out of five of the fish you catch on main-lake points is going to be a spot.”

The Cleary boys tied on baits to match the rocky conditions.

“When you’re fishing the main part of the lake below the South River, you’re going to be dealing mostly with rocks,” said Benjie. “You can’t really throw a Carolina rig down here. You’ll end up spending all your time retying. Because of that, I like to fish a jig and a big Texas-rigged worm.”

In the clear water Benjie was fishing a green-pumpkin jig made by Jack’s Jig. In stained water Benjie likes a black/blue jig with a green-pumpkin trailer.

“The next point down is another good one to fish,” said Benjie. “You can fish the point and then go down that rocky bank almost into the mouth of Tussahaw.”

When fishing a jig, Benjie uses 17-lb. Sufix line.

“I use that heavier line just because it’s a jig, and you can expect bites from better fish,” said Benjie. “The last five years Jackson has gotten ultra-clear. You can see four or five feet down. You really have to downsize now. I use 10- to 12-lb. line on about everything else.”

As we fished down the Alcovy toward the dam, we ricocheted back and forth across the lake hitting rocky points and several rock-infested banks near deep water. Benjie stayed with a jig while Ben chunked a Texas-rigged green-pumpkin Mag II worm.

“Die the tail of that thing, Ben,” Benjie said.

Using JJ’s Magic Juice, Ben died about an inch of the tail chartreuse.

“I’m not a fan about having the tail colored,” said Benjie. “I believe the fish just like the garlic smell. Ben did an experiment for school where he and some buddies fished for three nights in a row and used different scent attractants. JJ’s caught more fish. It’s got a chemical in it that soaks into the plastic. It holds the smell. He made an A on that project.”

If there’s a downside to JJ’s, it’s that you have to keep it cool. Benjie keeps it in a cooler when he fishes.

The scented worm was threaded onto a 4/0 Owner hook.

Over the course of the next hour, the father-and-son duo started sporadically throwing some of their favorite topwater baits as evening slipped toward nightfall.

“Last year we caught a lot of fish on rocky points with flukes and Sammys,” said Benjie. “I’ve caught them all during the day, but I have more confidence throwing those sorts of baits in the evenings.”

Benjie said this Lake Lanier twist has really heated up in the last few summers now that Jackson is producing a few bragging-sized spots.

“Humps have gotten good, too,” said Benjie. “Shallow ones that top out at 12 and 15 feet are good places, and I like the ones with rock.”

There was one more ingredient he added to his Lanier-like menu.

“A black-and-blue spinnerbait is good, too,” said Benjie. “I like a 3/4-oz. Ol-Nelle with a black willowleaf blade, about a 4 1/2, and a real small black Colorado blade, about the size of a dime. Throw it across the hump, let it sink to the bottom and drag it over the center of it. Usually when you’re coming into deeper water, they’ll hit it.”

My only experience involving a dark night, dark spinnerbaits and big spotted bass was in 1999 while on Lake Lanier with Jody Cordell. Jody, who is now a professional angler with FLW, was helping us film an episode of GON-TV. While filming that show, he made me a believer that big, dark-colored spinnerbaits, slow-rolled through brush and rocks around drops is absolutely deadly. We caught 3- to 5- pounders all night.

On Jackson a great place to chunk a blade after dark is directly across the Alcovy River from the screened-in boat house where we started our evening. There, you’ll find a pretty big cove. At the mouth of that cove is a marked hump that tops out in eight feet of water and drops into 30 feet.

Another rocky place to throw a spinnerbait after dark is 200 yards in front of the DNR boat house, which sits on the right side of the dam. There’s a rock levy that tops out at nine feet and drops quickly into much deeper water.

It was about 8 o’clock, and we still hadn’t put a fish in the boat. Benjie dug around inside his rod locker and pulled out a rod with a Spot Sticker jig tied on, hoping the small-profile jig would entice any-sized fish to bite.

“It’s a great bait to fish down in the rocks,” said Benjie. “I use a 3/16- or 1/8-oz. jig with either a Trick Worm or finesse worm. This is a good bait to fish when the fishing is tough.”

When fishing Spot Stickers, Benjie will downsize to 8- or 10-lb. line and a spinning reel. If fish are deep you can expect to catch a lot of smaller spots on these deep, rocky drops. Unfortunately, we couldn’t find a fish to bite.

“They’re just not here yet,” said Benjie.

We headed back up the lake toward the Hwy 212 bridge to fish some of Benjie’s favorite main-lake brushpiles. Probing deep brush up the lake has taken many a first-place check during Berrry’s tournaments.

For an hour we bounced around to  several brushpiles within sight of the Hwy 212 bridge. Benjie used a Carolina rig, which he said helps find the isolated brushpiles we were targeting. When he’d find one, he’d tell us exactly where to throw our Texas-rigs.

“Let’s head down the lake,” Benjie said.

When we came to the powerline area Benjie slowed way down. All three of us perked up at the incredible amount of surfacing shad that we could see in the moon light.

“All of these places are really better to fish when you find shad schooling in the evening,” said Benjie. “If shad are thick, you can catch bass on crankbaits, jigs and worms.”

The powerline is a well-known place to fish for bass and crappie. On the west side there’s a gradual point that runs out toward the river channel, and it’s got brush all over it.

“With all the shad here, we have to stop and fish this,” said Benjie.

Dragging a big Texas-rigged Mag II worm through the brush felt great. We were fishing the tops and sides of the point between eight and 12 feet of water. About my 10th drag through the brush my worm got drilled, but the hook-set came up short.

Two minutes later, the conservative 16-year-old spoke.

“There he is.”

I looked over and saw Ben’s rod high and bent. In the dark, I went fumbling around for my camera.

“Daaaad, get the net,” Ben said.

Tackleboxes, a camera case and a few rods laid across the net, and it was quickly apparent this fish would have to be lipped. The bass jumped five feet from the boat. In the dark, with just a camera flash popping, it was a difficult for Benjie to focus on the fish and then try to get his hand in its mouth. A final tail walk across the dark water had Ben a little worried.

“Grab the fish!”

Dad came through and lipped the 5 1/2-pounder, a fish we were glad to see on a tough night of fishing.

Ben Cleary, a young fireball, soon-to-be HD Marine tournament angler, came through for us on a night where we just needed one fish for a photo. Benjie wouldn’t have had it any other way. I’m proud to know Benjie, a guy who cares more about his son’s interest in the tournament world than his own.

“Ben’s ready for HD, he’s excited,” said Benjie. “We’re going to see what we can do. He went down to Oconee Saturday (June 17) and had 15 pounds all by himself.”

Watch out guys, he may be young, but you’ll be hard pressed to find an angler with with more passion and fire about the sport. I believe determination naturally pushes its way to the front.

Since that hot night in early June the fishing has improved. At Berry’s June 20 Tuesday night tournament it took almost 23 pounds to win. Rumor has it that a hump gave up the sack.

If you’re interested in fishing either the Tuesday or Friday night Berry’s pot tournaments, go to <www.berrysbass.com>.
 
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