138 today, and maybe a couple dozen "probables." It was a weird day. After 3 hours I only had about 60. The weather was right, just the little buggers wouldn't play along. I'd see them scampering around a field, but by the time I moved to within range... Nothing. They'd mostly gone to ground. Then around 5:30, BOOM! They woke up and without having to move around much at all I dropped the rest in about an hour.
Had my 795 out for the first time this season. I was impressed with its accuracy and reliability out of the box last year, even with the 25 round Pro-Mag mags. So over the winter, I redid it a bit to improve the ergo and trigger.
Boyds thumbhole stock. Man, really like the feel of this stock. Easy to point off-hand or shoot prone from a bipod. It just puts your hands where they need to be and the cheek weld for a scope is awesome.
Dip trigger and trigger guard. The trigger on the 795 was pretty awful. I find almost all North Am rimfire triggers terrible - and yes, that includes the "I wish it was banished from the face of the earth for fooling people into thinking it's a good trigger" gawdawful Savage Lawyer Action Trigger. The Dip trigger got rid of the creep, and now it's quite crisp. And the plastic trigger guard just seemed chintzy on the Boyds stock.
I have the parts for two more mods - McArbo spring kit to really dial in that trigger. It's very good now, but I'm aiming for awesome. And the Dip charging handle. I bought the Dip charging handle at the same time as the guard and trigger kit, because "why not, in for a penny, in for a pound." Running the gun heavily this afternoon, and yah, the factory charging handle needs to go. It's just a wee bit small, and not comfortable to operate.
Also on the list of upgrade: A better scope and slight lower rings to get the scope closer to the bore axis. The angle of this pic makes the height over bore look worse than it actually is, but I like to have the objective lens basically touching the bore - makes it easier to dial in a good base zero the get effective shots further out without having to worry about holdover. The Bushnell is a good scope for the price, but that was a budget price. I bought the 795 for $175 on sale, and was basically making a budget knockabout to save wear and tear on my CZ-452 Lux (which still rules my rimfire roost, in terms of accuracy), so I didn't want to drop too much on a scope. But the accuracy of the gun just far exceeded my expectations, and I'm finding myself using it so constantly, that I want as clear an optic as possible. This gun is worthy of a Leupold.