New owners celebrate first anniversary at Basin RV
JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 months, 1 week AGO
Joel Martin has been with the Columbia Basin Herald for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and is the most-tenured employee in the building. Martin is a married father of eight and enjoys spending time with his children and his wife, Christina. He is passionate about the paper’s mission of informing the people of the Columbia Basin because he knows it is important to record the history of the communities the publication serves. | July 7, 2025 3:00 AM
MOSES LAKE — Basin RV has been under new ownership for a year now, and the owners are getting more involved in the community, sponsoring the Brett Reese Memorial Car Show, the Sand Scorpions Bounty Hole, the Cowboy Breakfast and more.
“We’ve got five kids ourselves,” said owner RJ McFadden. “They all go to school here in town. So camping in our community is kind of our thing, spreading the dollars here.”
RJ and his wife, Teri, both grew up in Moses Lake, they said. RJ owned the Skyline Miniature Golf Course for a while in the 2010s, and most recently operated a mobile RV repair service, Road Trip RV, with a friend. That’s what got him into the RV field, he said. When Basin RV became available, he jumped at it, he said.
The first step was to remodel, McFadden said. The previous owner was — and is; he still works at Basin RV part-time — highly skilled at RV repair, but the business looked like what it was, a repair shop.
Teri did the decoration and organizing, they said.
“It was definitely a facelift on this place,” she said. “You couldn’t even get in the front door when you walked in. The front door was permanently blocked with tires. Now you can actually get in the front door, and that’s a big thing. People still go around to the side, and I’m like, ‘No you can come around the front.’”
“We wanted to … make it look good,” RJ McFadden said. “Now it looks like a business.”
A business, but a very family-oriented one. The McFaddens have five children, from 13 years old down to 3, and there’s a space in the front office set aside for them to play and even take a nap if needed.
“I keep a nice selection of toys and sand and coloring books,” Teri said. “They come down after school. Except the 3-year-old; he stays with me. He’s the greeter. Everybody who comes in loves (him). We had customers who brought us a thank you card and doughnuts and they brought (him) a little stuffed animal because he is so welcoming.”
Basin RV still does mobile RV repair and also sells used RVs. Being a small mom-and-pop operation gives them some flexibility in the repairs they can do, RJ McFadden said.
“We work on everything,” he said. “Every year, every make, every model. A lot of the RV companies are limited in what they can work on, by manufacturer but mostly by the years. They usually only work on 10-years or newer. A lot of people think it’s hard to find old RV parts. Give us a shot. We’ll find that part.”
As Basin RV grows, RJ said he may look for a larger location; the space on Lasco Lane next to SR 17 gets a mite crowded when it’s busy, he said.
“If you stay small long enough, you'll be big soon enough,” he said. “The plan is to grow, with community support … We're camping in our community forever. We're not going anywhere. We're not these big box chains where we're just here to get your money. Your hard-earned money is going to go somewhere good, and you're going to be happy with that experience.”
ARTICLES BY JOEL MARTIN
The Way Cafe opens in Moses Lake
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Ephrata Youth Fishing Derby Saturday
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Hands-on history
Youth Heritage Project to explore Ellensburg history, alternative energy
MOSES LAKE — Some students in the Columbia Basin will get a chance to experience history at close range this summer. The Washington Trust for Historic Preservation is accepting applications for its four-day Youth Heritage Project, which will be July 13-16 in Ellensburg this year. “We go to different places in the state every year … and do a deep dive into a place,” said Moira Nadal, director of preservation for the WTHP. “We … want the students to have a chance to get to know a place. They could be in a classroom anywhere, (but) walking around, spending time in a place, doing site visits, those are really important.”

