I grew up in a very rural area of NJ--very isolated from others and major towns.
To put it in perspective, the area was called the Pine Barrens.
My parents just moved away last year, but we had lived there since the late 70's.
As for things to do, well, there wasn't much. 4H, Grange, and church stuff was it. Because there were no extra curriculars in the K-8 school, many kids would do stupid stuff and not get caught.
These things would include: illegal deer hunting with a spotlight and pickup with a full gun rack in a residential area, teenagers giving sexual favors for rides to place, going fast down the roads and dragracing, and just stupid stuff. The reason no one got caught was there were no police in the township. The state police were a good 30 minutes away, so you stood a good chance of not getting caught.
The downtown area is shut down. Since my parents move, the old lady department store (just old ladies with a Sears catalog you could order from), the corner store, the bank, the barbershop and the bar have all closed. Two restaurants that were there have now closed as well as the antique store and the health food store. The only thing around is the pizza place (converted from the corner store), and church. The library is only open two -three days a week, and is in the old fire house. When we first moved, the post office was in the general store (which have both closed)
The schools were terrible, and very narrow minded. Of course, many things were tolerated and taught that other people would never be caught dead trying. If you were lucky, you didn't go to the Vo tech high school, and actually went to college instead of working at the gas station or diner. I was one of the lucky ones.
You have to drive at least 20 minutes to a decent store (
Walmart doesn't qualify, you can't get a prom dress or sushi at Walmart). There are no fast food places within 15 minute drive, same with a convienence stores. The mall is about 35-45 minutes away, with Philadelphia being at least an hour.
I hated it as a kid. There was nothing to do except watch other kids get in trouble or pick blueberries. We at least got cable TV early, whereas other populated neighborhoods got it many years later.
My sister still lives in this town. I don't understand the appeal. Its far from her work, far from her ex husband, and far from the kids school. I know the taxes are fairly cheaper than my more "urban suburb", but not by much. I'd rather have the nice new library, the police and fire, and a decent school system. I like being 1o minutes from Philly!
I visited my parents retirement home in Delaware last week. It was very similar. I don't understand it.