6 feet of snow around Labrador lodge 'unprecedented' this late in June - Action News
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6 feet of snow around Labrador lodge 'unprecedented' this late in June

Even for Labrador, this is a surprising amount of snow.

This is the latest in the season to have this much snow at Igloo Lake Lodge, says operator

Staff at Igloo Lake Lodge stand amid six-foot-tall snowbanks that encompass the Labrador fishing camp on June 13. (Submitted by Jim Burton)

Even for Labrador, the amount of snow around Igloo Lake Lodge is surprising.

A little snow, sure, but the banks around the southeastern Labrador fishing camp is wreaking havoc on summer plans.

There's not much you can do when you have a frozen lake.- Jim Burton

"It's not uncommon to see snow around the lodge not six feet, though," says Jim Burton, who operates Igloo Lake Lodge.

The lodge borders Mealy Mountain National Park, about 115 kilometres southeast of Happy Valley-Goose Bay.

Burton said this is the first time in 50 years he's had to fly in a snowmobile in order to get supplies to the camp and get it ready for the season.

This is the first time in 50 years, Jim Burton says, that there's been this much snow around the camp. (Submitted by Jim Burton)

"This is an anomaly," he told CBC's Labrador Morning.

"Unprecedented ice and snow conditions given the time of year. We've been as late as the 10th of June getting in there, so we've surpassed that."

Burton has had to cancel two corporate groups scheduled for last week and this week, pushing one to late August, and the other to 2019.

"You just can't walk into the woods with waist-high to six-feet of snow in some places," Burton said.

"There's not much you can do when you have a frozen lake."

Not a lot of fishing can be done when the lake is still frozen over in June. (Submitted by Jim Burton)

There are plenty of trout in the streams and rivers, but it's not feasible to get a fishing group out in the current conditions.

All the snow is also making it difficult to do regular maintenance on the camps, so Burton can't paint or do seasonal repairs.

This year's winter frost dislodged some of the plumbing, even moving the toilets, a problem that will need to be fixed before a group can stay in that camp.

"We're patiently waiting for that warm weather," Burton said.

"Perhaps over the next few days we'll be lucky enough to land our 1951 de HavillandBeaver float plane on this lake."

Read more articles from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Labrador Morning