Joe Gauvreau commutes each day from Kent Island to College Park in his green-and-white antique Cessna 170. A resident of Kentmorr, a community clustered around its own airstrip on Kent Island in Chesapeake Bay, Gauvreau parks his plane in his back yard.
About four mornings out of five, depending on the weather, he and his wife fly to College Park, pick up their car and drive to the New Carrollton Metro station where his wife boards a train for her job in Rosslyn.
Gauvreau then turns around and heads for his job with the Defense Nuclear Agency in Bethesda. They reverse the trip each evening.
Flying is all of six minutes shorter than driving the 55 miles one way, he said, but it's "a hell of a lot more fun -- and after all, how many people fly to work?" He flashed a grin from behind his aviator sunglasses and lit a cigarette -- the Marlboro Man of the skies.