Dear Domenico,
If the resulting sampling is good, then I think this is the best approach, it will give you a quasi-static bias and very reliable results via reweighing.
However, often the reason to combine multithermal and CV enhancement is that the system is challenging and both alone would not drive transitions. If this is the case, probably it's better to use a more exploratory approach, and combine OPES_METAD_EXPLORE with parallel tempering, as you would do with metadynamics. This will result in a more dynamical biasing, which should be better at escaping metastable states than the quasi-static bias of OPES_EXPANDED.
The setup you propose might also work, but it's less clear to me to what distribution the simulation will converge, and how the two biases will interact.
If most of the energy is linked to water and not to the slow mode, then another possibility is to first converge the multithermal bias, and then add the OPES_METAD_EXPLORE. This can be done with two separate simulations, or by adding the option UPDATE_FROM=xxx to OPES_METAD_EXPLORE so that it will start biasing only after xxx steps, when the OPES_EXPANDED bias will be already quasi-static.
Hope this helps! You can send me an email if you'd like to discuss details specific of your system.
Best,
Michele