Ozark Trail 10-degree adult thinsulate wearable sleeping bag for $22

We have stayed nicely warm while sleeping in the cold in this bag. Rated for 30-degrees, we ozark trail sun shelter have slept in it down to 13. The bag, by itself, is not very warm at that temperature.

The bag on its own is very comfortable down to the 30-degree range. I cannot believe that I wasted 160 dollars on some junk. By the time we got back from camping the next weekend three out of four sleeping bags had the zippers broken. I’m so disappointed with this product that I advise anyone buying sleeping bags not to even look at Ozark and buy Coleman instead.

I used this bag from February of 2002 to June of 2002 on the Appalachian Trail, and I still have it. The first night out it was less than 14 degrees F, and I had at least 50 nights under 40 degrees F. I can’t say I was warm, but I wasn’t shivering, freezing, or cold either, although I did wear 2 layers of clothing. ozark trail sleeping bag I won’t ever buy an expensive sleeping bag after carrying this cheapo, unless I can find a cheap bag that weighs a lot less. I purchased this sleeping bag for warm weather camping trips at the local lake. For fifteen dollars I wasn’t expecting (or needing) anything that would stand up to freezing weather.

It puffs up about half an inch, so kind of good. Stay cozy even on the coldest nights of your camping or hiking trips with the Everest Mummy Sleeping Bag, +5F/-15C Degree. It is terribly heavy for backpacking and definitely not rated correctly.

Unfortunately the workmanship was more than a little upsetting, even for that price. However, I used this bag two nights last weekend and found it was too cold on its own—lowest temp was 51 degrees each of those nights. I was in a large tent (admittedly, a smaller tent would have been better) with one other person. I had to add a fleece sleeping bag for more insulation.