A strong colony
should be able to defend itself against wasps. However, a colony that is slow building up may indeed need help by fitting an entrance restrictor. As this could impair ventilation I use a wasp-proof mesh over part of the entrance leaving
enough entrance area so as not to restrict foraging traffic, while making it easier for the guard
bees to defend the entrance. In the winter, the hive should be fitted with
mouse guards. Mine give the recommended 7.5 mm maximum aperture width. However, yesterday, when cleaning hive floors after the winter, I found a dead pygmy shrew on one floor. Perhaps it managed to squeeze under the mouse guard but, once it was fat with bees, could not get out. Either that or the bees stung it to death.
Wintering bees in the far north is certainly not an easy task. John Moerschbacher has succeeded in Alberta at about 4,000 ft omsl. Your climate, Nick, sounds much the same as his. I have put a page on his modification of the Warr
é hive at
http://warre.biobees.com/alberta_warres.htm .
Basically he uses much thicker
wood than the minimum 20 mm that Warr
é recommended and he wraps his hives with tarred building paper in the autumn/fall. He has also substituted for the quilt a condensation trap that doubles as a feeder. He says a small upper entrance should be added.
Surrounding the hives with bales or anything that could screen it from
solar heat gain is not a good idea. However, a good prevailing wind break far enough away not to restrict sunshine when the sun is at a low angle might be worth considering.