






Flannel
SLEEP COMFORTABLY: You’ll forget you’re camping with these comfortable sleeping bags! With a soft poly-flannel lining and plenty of room to spread out. The half-circle mummy-style hood keeps you warm and your pillow clean
STAY WARM: Rain or shine, you’ll be warm and rested in this sleeping bag. Innovative fiber fill; double-layer construction and draft tubes work together to keep the cold out and the warmth in. 5 Star comfort on all your outdoor adventures
EASY TO PACK: TETON provides a durable compression sack for stuffing your sleeping bag into. Starting at the bottom, stuff the bag in, then tighten the heavy-duty straps for ultimate compressibility. Say no to rolling up your sleeping bag ever again
TIPS TO STAY WARM Fluff your sleeping bag and use an insulated camp pad to sleep warmer; also wear a stocking cap to avoid heat loss, stay hydrated, and wear socks
TETON SPORTS PROMISE: Reach out to our AMAZING product support team if you have any questions or concerns; YOU CAN COUNT ON US to get you taken care of and back OUTDOORS
9 reviews for Teton Celsius Regular, 25F, 20F, 0F Degree Sleeping Bags, All Weather Bag for Adults and Kids, Camping Made Easy and Warm, Travel Sack Included
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$75.58
Scott Pinner –
Toasty Bag, Soft Lining, Great Features, BRIGHT ORANGE!!!
This sleeping bag is WARM and roomy enough for my 5’11” with good posture 150 pound athletic with a cookie gut frame. The orange color is brighter than anticipated. The brushed-cotton flannel lining is super-comfortable and astheticly pleasing with the colors of a tootsie roll wrapper…which I really like. This sleeping bag is so very toasty that it is likely to be too warm for a 60-70° Summer night, however, ideal for late Spring and early Fall 40-60 degree nights and likely comfortable at 20° F. Zero Fahrenheit is the advertised comfort rating for men….I will unlikely test that extreme of a temperature. I had the thought of buying a smaller bag in effort to compress this bag further, however, I believe the manufacturer has met the bags compression limit with the supplied bag. Overall, this is a great value for a non-hiking sleeping bag and I have ordered a second Teton Celcius sleeping bag in a less flashy color (grey), rather than return the traffic cone/hunter’s safety orange tootsie roll bag which will only leave the house as a spare or guest loaner bag (*they will no doubt love the color). I’ll use the orange bag as my cold night home sack and when th Dolphins play the Browns.Enjoy!
Ol’ Bob –
No complaints
Great bag to add to your B.O.B. Kit warm and lightweight, awesome zipper and very comfortable.
Smilin Sam –
My first reaction when I took it out of the box? DAMN this thing is BIG!
OK. Now that we’ve got that out of the way…let’s just start from the beginning, shall we? This thing is big. That’s what it is — a Big. Warm. Inexpensive. And all in all pretty well made sleeping bag. (Although as another reviewer pointed out it would have made more sense to have the zipper go across the bottom so it could be opened up flat. That’s why I deducted 1 star.) And not to belabor the point, but reading that this bag weighs 5 pounds is one thing; seeing it up close and personal is another. DAMN this thing is big.However, it DOES fit my Teton 75L pack in the upper outside strap down section underneath the main strap down area. (I haven’t tried to fit it into the designated zippered “sleeping bag pouch” section because for me, where I have it now secured is more beneficial and allows me to use the designated sleeping bag zippered pouch for other items.)And in fairness, this is replacing a 35 degree Kelty Tuck, which weighs half as much and packs down much smaller. BUT…I need to add a 2 pound wool blanket to make the Kelty usable in really cold weather situations. So…when you factor that in, and the fact that I need 2 places in my pack for that combo — one for the Kelty and another one for the blanket — this bag does double duty and only weighs about 8 ounces more while only monopolizing one storage area, not two. (I’d previously kept the Kelty in the same area that I’ll put the Teton.)Additionally, this bag is more comfortable for me than the Kelty, which is more of a mummy bag. In this Teton bag I can sleep on my stomach and have both arms/hands up near my head, rather than 1 by my head and 1 pinned down by my side like in the Kelty. (The pull cords for the neck collar and head section do tend to be a bit annoying but not terribly so.) I also prefer the functioning of the zipper on this bag to the one on the Kelty. That one ALWAYS gets hung up at various places. (It isn’t so much that it snags any material; it just stops zipping. It’s frustrating.) This one is pretty smooth, although if it’s not zipped up all the way it tends to unzip itself by itself.Finally, if you fold this bag in half width-wise, then fold it in half length-wise, lay on it, then start from the non-corded end to stuff it intelligently into the compression sack, it’s relatively easy to get this sucker neatly back into the sack without doing any damage to the bag or the compression sack. (And taking it out of the compression sack for the first time, the bag fluffed right up almost immediately. That was nice.)So to recap: Yes. This bag is big. It is NOT a super expensive lofty goose down bag that compresses down to the size of a Coke can. However, for what it IS…a relatively big, somewhat heavy, comfortable, warm, non-down sleeping bag…it’s pretty damn good. (As well as being pretty damn big.) In my mind I compare this more to the old Coleman sleeping bags. In that regard, I think this is better, although a lot of folks love those Coleman bags. To each his own.CAVEAT: When I say “big” I’m not really saying roomy. I’m 5’8″ and scrunched down in the bag so I can pull the little head section tight while lying on my stomach (basically using the bag backwards, with the head section covering the back of my head), my feet do touch the bottom of the bag, but not uncomfortably so. I’d imagine anyone taller than about 5’8″, however, would need to get the XL or bigger.(Did I mention that it’s big?):-DNOTE: The past few nights here it’s been either in the 20s or 30s. Sleeping in the Kelty/wool blanket combo (along with putting that whole combo on a non-insulated Klymit inflatable ultra lightweight pad, encased by a 2Go Tyvex zippered bivvy sack) I was quite toasty. And clothes-wise all I was wearing were wool socks and top/bottom wool thermals. No other clothes. No gloves. No balaclava. Tonight it’s going to be a little warmer and I’m going to test this bag out by itself, just on the Klymit pad. And as soon as it’s down in the 30s or 20s again I’ll try this Teton bag by itself and see how insulating and warm it really is. Then I’ll update this review. This is basically just an unboxing review. For me, if I can get the same or better results just with the Teton and 2Go bivvy sack, then that’ll be my set up. Not perfect, but more than good enough. And simpler.Update 11/25/18: Last night I slept in the Teton Celsius, on top of the Klymit V2 pad, which was zipped inside the 2Go Tyvex bivvy sack. I was only wearing Merino wool thermals top/bottom, thick wool socks, and nice wool gloves. The temperature went down to around 42 degrees. I slept on my stomach, with the bag fully zipped and the head area pulled up over the back of my head but not cinched at all. (I also had a small inflatable pillow.) I was extremely comfortable. Much more comfortable than sleeping with the Kelty + wool blanket. The Teton is real cushy and more roomy than the mummy design of the Kelty. I slept until 9 AM and felt great when I woke up. Next up: I’ll wait until the temperature goes back down into the 20s and update the review after that. So far, so good!!
Patrick Gleason –
Good Bag at a Good Price, but Be Certain of the Size You Need
The short version:Great price, good bag, kept me nicely warm down to 17 degrees (some of my fellow campers who I know had more expensive gear were complaining of getting cold feet, etc – not me) but I picked the wrong size for my 6’1″, 220 pound frame – I should have gotten the XL or XXL.The long version: A quick back story for why I bought this bag. I was invited to a guy’s weekend camping trip that my brother-in-law and some friends take during the winter every year. I haven’t really camped in ages, and as a result, I had no gear, but I wanted to go and I geared up for the trip and was trying to be a smart shopper on everything, which led me to this Teton bag as being a solid bang for the buck, based on reviews I’d read.As far as performance is concerned, this bag did what I needed it to do – it kept me warm for the two nights we were out. Night one got into the mid/low 20s, but night two got down to 17 degrees. (Caveat – make sure you have a good pad that protects you from ground cold.) With that said, I stayed warm on both nights. On night one I was sleeping on a pad on a cot, and I woke up with some of my fellow campers talking about how their feet got cold, etc. Not me – I was comfortably warm all night. On night two, I decided to break down the cot so I’d have more room in my tent – and I put the pad on the ground. A little bit of cold came up through the pad – NOT the bag’s fault. I countered this by putting on a lightweight long-sleeved shirt, and again, stayed warm the rest of the night. I believe that if I had stayed on the cot, there wouldn’t have been an issue, even at 17 degrees.SIZE – this bag measures 80×33 inches. I’m 6’1 and about 220, and figured that this bag would be plenty big enough. Nope. I “fit” in the bag, but barely. My feet were all the way at the end, and the 33″ width made turning over challenging. I felt that this size was a bit confining for me laterally, and a longer bag would have allowed me to hunker down in it a bit better so I could have better kept my nose and face warmer. (I think the lack of ability to hunker down into the bag a bit better is what caused my bare arms to feel some of the chill that came in around the top – again, not the bag’s fault.) Teton makes this bag in an XXL that’s 90×39, and if I am invited for this trip again next year, I’ll get this very same bag in the larger size – I can’t imagine I’d ever need anything “better,” and I’ll politely pass if the weather is forecast to get colder than this trip, which initially was only forecast to get into the mid-20s during the night.Bottom line: I stayed warm, and other than the size, I’d recommend this as being a budget-friendly cold weather sleeping bag.
Sarvesh kumar –
Other brand give by you
あさ –
日本では無名のメーカー?ちなみに私が買った時の価格は11,838円。海外からの配送で最長1ヶ月かかるとのことだったが2週間ほどで届いて良かった。注意点・適応身長は175cmまで。快適温度・-1度。良い点・普通の布団に包まれているような快適さ。悪い点・収納サイズがデカい。暖かい。ボリューム感もあり、内側の肌触りも良いので普通の布団に近い感覚。寝袋のナイロン感が苦手な人にもお勧め。ストレッチが効いて快適だと宣伝していた有名アウトドアメーカーのマミー型を初めてのキャンプで使って足元の窮屈さが嫌で手放した私だが、これは封筒型ということで楽。頭のほうは絞れば擬似的にマミー型のように頭を包めるが本当のマミー型ほどしっかり頭を包んではくれない。肩口から冷気が入りにくくなる程度。とても嵩張るのが難点で、コンプレッションバックを締めてもデカいので車以外の移動手段には向かない。キャンプで実際に使用。最低気温マイナス1度で使用。ホッカイロ以外の暖房を用意しておらず、さすがに寒いがキツイほどではなかった。キャンプに慣れて無駄な荷物を減らしたくなってくると、やはり収納時の大きさが気になるが、快適さとトレードオフだろう。色もミリタリーテイストな渋い感じで良い。
G –
Buenísimo, ayuda mucho para acampar en la montaña, al ser híbrido es muy cómodo y te mantiene muy calientito, duermes muy cómodo y la verdad es que son muy prácticos, muy recomendados !!
Sydneygue22 –
Excelente opción de sleeping bag. La probamos estando a 2 grados C y fue efectiva. Cómoda, caliente y con suficiente espacio para un adulto promedio.
takashi –
低価格羽毛シュラフは買いたく無く、ブランド羽毛シュラフはとても買えないのでこちらを試し買いもう、布団です。先日氷点下キャンプにて使用しましたが普通に寝ることが出来ました。元の収納袋にはデカすぎて入らないです。丸めてベルトで縛ってます