This is off track a tad, but it relates to what i asked...
Following on from that...(this is not my way of thinking by the way, it's something I read and wanted to get a more informed opinion before replying to it)...
I viewed a post on a site and the person mentioned something about the weather up here... 'there has been too much low level shear to suppress initiation of convection and thereby giving us a "greenhouse" like effect'
There was no mention whether it was speed or directional shear, but myself looking at the sounding there was no directional shear until around 3-400mb. There was some speed shear below 500mb though - albeit he didn't mention which one.
From what I have learned to date is; that shear determines updraft/storm strength/type and to some extent the direction of storm motion and not whether it 'creates' the convection in the first place.
All the other indices must be looked at before that right?
If the CAPE and -LI levels were high then shear would play no part in whether there's convection because the atmosphere is unstable enough to create cloud formation (convection) anyway - there were no thunderstorms from the resultant sounding, but that would not be because of the shear - that's to do with everything else.
I'm pretty sure i'm right about that because that comment didn't sit well with me - but wanted to check!
Mike