
Rey Fire smoke seen from the Santa Barbara bird refuge Sunday afternoon. (Urban Hikers photo) 
A tanker drops a load on the Rey Fire Saturday. (Zack Warburg / Noozhawk photo) 
The Rey Fire burning in Los Padres National Forest sends up smoke Sunday afternoon, as seen from Los Prietos Ranger Station. (U.S. Forest Service photo) 
Plumes of smoke from the Rey Fire were clearly visible from the Coral Casino Beach & Cabana Club in Montecito on Saturday. (Urban Hikers / Noozhawk photo) 
Smoke from the Rey Fire creeps out of upper Toro Canyon on Saturday afternoon, in a view looking east from Camino Alto on the Santa Barbara Riviera. (Michael Ditmore photo) 
(Zack Warburg / Noozhawk photo) 
(Zack Warburg / Noozhawk photo) 
The Rey Fire in a view Saturday from the Murrieta Divide in Ojai. (Peter Green photo) 
The Rey Fire in a view Saturday from the Murrieta Divide in Ojai. (Peter Green photo) 
The Rey Fire on Saturday afternoon from Santa Barbara. (Joan Rutkowski photo) 
The Rey Fire in a view Saturday from the Murrieta Divide in Ojai. (Peter Green photo) 
The Rey Fire in a view Saturday from the Murrieta Divide in Ojai. (Peter Green photo) 
The Rey Fire on Saturday afternoon from La Cumbre Plaza in Santa Barbara. (Danielle Methmann photo) 
Objects in view are not as close as they appear. (Kim Clark / Noozhawk photo via Instagram) 
Firefighters work the Rey Fire Friday. (Brooke Holland / Noozhawk photo) 
Santa Barbara City Fire Department crews work the Rey Fire Friday. (Brooke Holland / Noozhawk photo) 
Smoke from the Rey Fire was visible from La Cumbre Road in Santa Barbara Friday afternoon. (JC Corliss photo) 
The August Rey Fire burned about 32,000 acres along Paradise Road and into Santa Barbara backcountry on Los Padres National Forest land. (Brooke Holland / Noozhawk file photo) 
Santa Barbara City firefighters work on the west end of the Rey Fire Friday. (Mike Eliason / Santa Barbara County Fire Department photo) 
(Brooke Holland / Noozhawk photo) 
The Rey Fire burned 1,000 acres as of Friday morning. (Brooke Holland / Noozhawk photo) 
The Rey Fire seen Thursday night from Rancho Oso RV & Camping Resort. (Photo courtesy of RBG) 
A Santa Barbara County firefighter works on smoldering hot spots Friday morning off Paradise Road for the Rey Fire. (Mike Eliason / Santa Barbara County Fire Department photo) 
(Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
A tanker makes a drop on the Rey Fire that burns along Paradise Road Thursday afternoon. (Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
(Steve Kennedy photo) 
Smoke from the Rey Fire clouds the horizon from Knapp’s Castle. (Steve Kennedy photo) 
(Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
An air tanker makes a retardant drop on the Rey Fire, which had charred some 600 acres along the Upper Santa Ynez River as of Thursday night. (Zack Warburg / Noozhawk photo) 
An air tanker makes a retardant drop on the Rey Fire, which had charred some 600 acres along the Upper Santa Ynez River as of Thursday night. (Zack Warburg / Noozhawk photo) 
A downed power line may have sparked the Rey Fire, which charred some 600 acres Thursday along Paradise Road in the Upper Santa Ynez River area. (Zack Warburg / Noozhawk photo) 
(Zack Warburg / Noozhawk photo) 
(Zack Warburg / Noozhawk photo) 
(Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
An air tanker makes a retardant drop on the Rey Fire, which had charred some 600 acres along the Upper Santa Ynez River as of Thursday night. (Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
(Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
(Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
(Steve Kennedy photo) 
(Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
The Rey Fire off Paradise Road caused campground and resident evacuations Thursday. (Diego Topete / Noozhawk photo) 
Smoke from the Rey Fire was visible from all over Santa Barbara County’s South Coast Thursday afternoon. (Steve Kennedy photo) 
Early air support firefighting efforts during the Rey Fire were visible from the top of San Marcos Road Thursday afternoon. (Michael Holliday FAIA photo) 
Los Padres National Forest and Santa Barbara County fire agencies responded to a vegetation fire off Paradise Road Thursday afternoon. (Santa Barbara County Fire Department photo) 
Highway 154 had a clear view of the Rey Fire smoke before the roadway was closed Thursday afternoon. (Laurie Jervis photo) 
The Paradise Road vegetation fire was visible from the Highway 154 lookout point Thursday afternoon. (Laurie Jervis photo) 
A vegetation fire near Paradise Road burned an estimated 300 acres as of 4 p.m. Thursday. (Santa Barbara County Fire Department photo) 
Residents in the unincorporated Goleta Valley could see Rey Fire smoke Thursday. (Lauren Hanson photo) 
The Rey Fire smoke was visible from North La Cumbre Road in Santa Barbara Thursday afternoon. (Chris Donahue photo) 
(Malcolm Cross photo) 
The Rey Fire smoke seen from UCSB. (Kevin Claiborne photo) 
A Ventura County helicopter responded to the Rey Fire in southern Santa Barbara County Thursday. (Ventura County Air Support Unit photo)
Noozhawk executive editor Giana Magnoli can be reached at gmagnoli@noozhawk.com.
More by Giana Magnoli, Noozhawk Executive Editor