What kind of weather do stationary fronts bring? ?
When a fast-moving front slows down and stalls it becomes a stationary front. A cold front is the boundary between cool and warm air when the cool air is replacing the warm air. A warm front is the boundary when the warm air is winning the battle. When the pushing is a standoff, the boundary is known as a stationary front. Stationary fronts often bring several days of cloudy, wet weather that can last a week or more. If there’s enough humidity in the air, clouds and precipitation will form as warm air overruns cool air along a stationary front. Sometimes, stationary fronts can stay stationary or nearly so for days. When this happens, the sky can stay gray with rain or snow. Stationary fronts often dissipate over the region they are stalled in or they can become moving fronts again if the upper-level winds become more perpendicular to the front and begin to push it along.