Winter hasn't ended everywhere in North America – just ask one lodge owner in the eastern Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Located about 600 miles northeast of Caribou, Maine, areas near the Igloo Lake Lodge in Labrador remain buried under six feet of snow , locals told CBC News. The deep snow cover, which has persisted after a snowstorm struck parts of the province earlier in the month, has been a late-spring surprise for lodge operators who say they're usually getting the summer activities started by now.

"It's not uncommon to see snow around the lodge – not six feet, though," Igloo Lake Lodge operator Jim Burton told CBC News.

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Burton also told CBC News that the lodge, which is located on Igloo Lake at the edge of Mealy Mountain National Park, needed to have a snowmobile flown in so they could travel to get supplies in preparation for the summer crowd. It's a popular summer fishing spot, but with so much snow still on the ground, Burton said they've already had to cancel two corporate group outings to the lodge.

"You just can't walk into the woods with waist-high-to-six-feet of snow in some places," Burton also told CBC News. "There's not much you can do when you have a frozen lake."

Through the weekend, temperatures in the province are expected to remain near- to below-average, according to weather.com meteorologist Chris Dolce . That's not good news for those who are rooting for the snow to melt, nor is it good for Burton, who's hoping a warm-up will come soon so he can get the lodge ready for summer visitors.

"We're patiently waiting for that warm weather," he told CBC News.