I don't see it as an issue... Sure, it took a few months for my batches to clear up since I didn't use any additives, or cold crash it. But I'm ok with that. Having a good stockpile of patience is a very good thing when it comes to all kinds of brewing/fermenting.
For reference, I bottled some of my mead after about six months. It had cleared up nicely and looks great. I have three gallons that's been sitting on 1.5oz of medium toast Hungarian oak for just over a month now. I plan on bottling that up before Thanksgiving time. That will put it almost a full year from start to bottling on that part.
My own hard cider/apple wine batch (used 3.5 gallons of natural apple juice, .5 gallons of raw cider) has been going for about two weeks now. It's slowed down a lot and is beginning to clear. I'll probably let it go another couple/few weeks before priming and bottling it up (should be in the area of 8.8-9.1%)... I used some Lalvin 71B-1122 yeast for the batch, giving it enough food to go the distance, as well as giving it a good amount of oxygenation at the start.
Personally, I pick my yeasts by what they can also add to a fermentation. Not just what their tolerance level is (although I try to get that to match too).
For your batch, you could try getting it a bit warmer, depending on what it's temperature is right now, and what the yeast has for it's "happy range"... Although you might need to let it age a bit longer if you do that.